ICG2022-557
https://doi.org/10.5194/icg2022-557
10th International Conference on Geomorphology
© Author(s) 2022. This work is distributed under
the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.

On the physical vulnerability of buildings exposed to landslide hazard: application to the Lisbon Metropolitan Area

Ana Cardoso1, Susana Pereira2,3, Tiago Miguel Ferreira4, José Luís Zêzere2,3, Raquel Melo2,5, Teresa Vaz2, Sérgio C. Oliveira2,3, Ricardo A. C. Garcia2,3, Pedro Pinto Santos2,3, Eusébio Reis2,3, and Paulo B. Lourenço6
Ana Cardoso et al.
  • 1University of Lisbon, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning , Portugal (amcardoso@campus.ul.pt)
  • 2Center of Geographical Studies, Institute of Geography and Spatial Planning, University of Lisbon, Portugal
  • 3Associate Laboratory TERRA
  • 4Department of Geography and Environmental Management, University of the West of England, UK
  • 5Instituto de Ciências da Terra, Universidade de Évora, Portugal
  • 6Institute for Sustainability and Innovation in Structural Engineering, Department of Civil Engineering, University of Minho, Portugal

This work aims to assess the physical vulnerability of buildings (PVB) exposed to landslides that can be triggered by rainfall and earthquake in the Lisbon metropolitan area (LMA).

Susceptibility to landslides triggered by rainfall was assessed with a statistical model (Information Value), using seven predisposing factors: slope, aspect, geology, curvature, land use, and topographic wetness and position (TPI) indexes. A landslide inventory containing 4k landslides identified in the Lisbon and Tagus Valley region was used. The ROC curve of this model produced an AUC of 0.92. In this approach, the area defined as most susceptible was selected to assess the PVB for each exposed building to landslides with a slip surface depth of 1 m and an accumulated material height of 0.5 m.

Susceptibility to landslides triggered by earthquakes was assessed with an Analytic Hierarchy Process to achieve the relative weights based on the Saaty’s scale of influence using six predisposing factors: slope, curvature, TPI, geology, PGA and distance to faults. The results of this model were compared with a historical inventory of landslides triggered by earthquakes in the LMA obtained from documental sources (Vaz and Zêzere, 2016). The area most susceptible to landslides (8th and 9th deciles) was selected to assess the PVB for each exposed building to landslides with a slip surface depth of 3 m and an accumulated material height of 1 m.

In both cases, the PVB assessment considered all exposed buildings with a residential function surveyed in the 2011 Census (Georeferenced Buildings Database - BGE), including the following parameters: construction material, presence of reinforced structure, number of floors, conservation status, and need for repairs in the structure and finishes. Each parameter was divided into a set of building classes obtained from BGE. A score was given to each building class and the respective parameter. Both scores and parameters’ weights are based on expert opinion and dedicated literature (Guillard-Gonçalves et al., 2016; Pereira et al., 2020).

The analysis allowed us to observe meaningful regional multi-hazard potential interactions between earthquake and rainfall triggered landslides which can generate, in space and time, a complex level of damages scenarios for residential buildings. Additionally, it contributes to identifying risk hotspots and possible risk adaptation and mitigation measures.

 

Acknowledgments

To MIT-RSC - Multi-risk Interactions Towards Resilient and Sustainable Cities (MIT-EXPL/CS/0018/2019), Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT I.P.), MIT-Portugal program; RISKCOAST (SOE3/P4/EO868), Interreg-SUDOE program. Pedro Pinto Santos financed through FCT I.P contract CEECIND/00268/2017. CEG Research Unit UID/GEO/00295/2019

 

References:

Guillard-Gonçalves, C., Zêzere, J. L., Pereira, S., & Garcia, R. A. (2016). Assessment of physical vulnerability of buildings and analysis of landslide risk at the municipal scale: application to the Loures municipality, Portugal. Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences, 16(2), 311-331.

Pereira, S., Santos, P. P., Zêzere, J. L., Tavares, A. O., Garcia, R. A. C., & Oliveira, S. C. (2020). A landslide risk index for municipal land use planning in Portugal. Science of the Total Environment, 735, 139463.

Vaz, T., & Zêzere, J. L. (2016). Landslides and other geomorphologic and hydrologic effects induced by earthquakes in Portugal. Natural Hazards, 81(1), 71–98.

How to cite: Cardoso, A., Pereira, S., Ferreira, T. M., Zêzere, J. L., Melo, R., Vaz, T., Oliveira, S. C., Garcia, R. A. C., Pinto Santos, P., Reis, E., and Lourenço, P. B.: On the physical vulnerability of buildings exposed to landslide hazard: application to the Lisbon Metropolitan Area, 10th International Conference on Geomorphology, Coimbra, Portugal, 12–16 Sep 2022, ICG2022-557, https://doi.org/10.5194/icg2022-557, 2022.