Increasing the Resilience of European Transport Infrastructure

Kostas Bouklas*, Angelos Amditis, Rafael Weilharter, Visvanathan Ramesh, Miguel Ángel Trujillo Soto, Guillermo Heredia, Luca Belsito, Stephanos Camarinopoulos, Friedrich Fraundorfer

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference paperpeer-review

Abstract

Extreme weather conditions, climate change, damages to the infrastructure (caused by natural and man-made hazards) and traffic impediments negatively impact the reliability of mobility solutions. Risk analysis, adaptation measures and strategies that enable minimizing the impact of both natural and man-made extreme events on seamless transport operation, protect the users of the transport network in case of extreme conditions, as well as provide optimal information to operators and users of the transport infrastructure, need to be developed. Road transport is vulnerable to extreme weather events, while bridges and tunnels are among the most critical land transport structures. A large number of bridges and tunnels have been in operation for more than 50 years and there are widespread signs of deterioration. They need inspection, vulnerability assessment and, when needed, appropriate interventions. Inspection, though, in inaccessible areas, or structures with high volumes of traffic, is expensive, time-consuming, and potentially dangerous. At the same time, structural/vulnerability assessment is also a lengthy process which is especially painful after extreme events. The overall goal of RESIST (RESilient transport InfraSTructure to extreme events) a RIA H2020 project funded by the EU commission with grant number 769,066 is to increase the resilience of seamless transport operation to natural and man-made extreme events, protect the users of the European transport infrastructure and provide optimal information to the operators and users of the transport infrastructure. In the context of RESIST, robotics for visual and contact inspection of structures, structural vulnerability assessment, infrastructure risk management as well as mobility continuity applications considering stress levels of the drivers are being developed towards a high level of resilience of the transport infrastructure.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationCivil Structural Health Monitoring - Proceedings of CSHM-8 Workshop
EditorsCarlo Rainieri, Giovanni Fabbrocino, Nicola Caterino, Francesca Ceroni, Matilde A. Notarangelo
PublisherSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH
Pages761-774
Number of pages14
ISBN (Print)9783030742577
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2021
Event8th Civil Structural Health Monitoring Workshop, CSHM-8 2021 - Virtual, Online
Duration: 31 Mar 20212 Apr 2021

Publication series

NameLecture Notes in Civil Engineering
Volume156
ISSN (Print)2366-2557
ISSN (Electronic)2366-2565

Conference

Conference8th Civil Structural Health Monitoring Workshop, CSHM-8 2021
CityVirtual, Online
Period31/03/212/04/21

Keywords

  • Bridges
  • Extreme events
  • Mitigation
  • Prevention
  • Resilience
  • Response
  • Risk management
  • Seamless mobility
  • Tunnels

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Civil and Structural Engineering

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