TY - JOUR
T1 - Resilience Readiness Levels for buildings
T2 - Establishing multi-hazard resilience metrics and rating systems
AU - Bianchi, Simona
AU - Matteoni, Michele
AU - Kim, Kyujin
AU - Koniari, Anna Maria
AU - Koning, Kyra
AU - Luna-Navarro, Alessandra
AU - Peng, Zhikai
AU - Silva, Anna
AU - Overend, Mauro
AU - More Authors, null
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - The built environment is vulnerable to climate-induced extreme events and natural disasters, which are repeatedly exposing communities to severe consequences and market disruptions. In response, the construction industry is developing resilient technologies for buildings, but the proposed solutions are often not cost-effective, rarely eco-friendly and typically fail to address multiple hazards present in many locations. These shortcomings stem from the absence of a clearly defined framework for quantifying holistic multi-hazard resilience. As a result, investment decisions are ill-informed and technical solutions are sub-optimal. This paper redresses this issue by proposing quantitative indicators and introducing the Resilience Readiness Levels to assess the resilience of buildings, considering multi-domain factors (physical, social, economic, environmental) in single or multi-hazard contexts (heat, seismic, wind, flood). The proposed resilience indices and calculation methods are based on a diverse set of scientific literature and real-world practices, and are demonstrated on Dutch and Italian urban blocks with different local hazards and building layouts. The results show that the multi-domain resilience approach can support informed early-stage building design and retrofit decision-making for single hazards, while aiding prioritization and intervention planning for improving building disaster preparedness in multi-hazard scenarios.
AB - The built environment is vulnerable to climate-induced extreme events and natural disasters, which are repeatedly exposing communities to severe consequences and market disruptions. In response, the construction industry is developing resilient technologies for buildings, but the proposed solutions are often not cost-effective, rarely eco-friendly and typically fail to address multiple hazards present in many locations. These shortcomings stem from the absence of a clearly defined framework for quantifying holistic multi-hazard resilience. As a result, investment decisions are ill-informed and technical solutions are sub-optimal. This paper redresses this issue by proposing quantitative indicators and introducing the Resilience Readiness Levels to assess the resilience of buildings, considering multi-domain factors (physical, social, economic, environmental) in single or multi-hazard contexts (heat, seismic, wind, flood). The proposed resilience indices and calculation methods are based on a diverse set of scientific literature and real-world practices, and are demonstrated on Dutch and Italian urban blocks with different local hazards and building layouts. The results show that the multi-domain resilience approach can support informed early-stage building design and retrofit decision-making for single hazards, while aiding prioritization and intervention planning for improving building disaster preparedness in multi-hazard scenarios.
KW - Buildings
KW - Decision making
KW - Multi-hazard
KW - Performance-based
KW - Resilience
KW - Risk assessment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105013114357&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2025.105746
DO - 10.1016/j.ijdrr.2025.105746
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105013114357
SN - 2212-4209
VL - 128
JO - International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
JF - International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
M1 - 105746
ER -