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Decision support framework for bridge condition assessments

Björnsson, Ivar LU ; Larsson Ivanov, Oskar LU ; Honfi, Daniel and Leander, John (2019) In Structural Safety 81.
Abstract
An essential aspect in the maintenance of existing bridges is the ability to adequately and accurately assess and evaluate the condition of the structure. Condition assessments, which can be carried out in any number of ways, provide valuable information concerning the actual state of a bridge, including the severity of potential damages, and form the basis for further maintenance decisions. Any decision support concerning the management of existing structures thus requires attention towards the uncertainties associated with the assessment methods when applied in practice as well as the maintenance actions these support. These uncertainties cannot be solely described as model uncertainties but are also a result of the variation in... (More)
An essential aspect in the maintenance of existing bridges is the ability to adequately and accurately assess and evaluate the condition of the structure. Condition assessments, which can be carried out in any number of ways, provide valuable information concerning the actual state of a bridge, including the severity of potential damages, and form the basis for further maintenance decisions. Any decision support concerning the management of existing structures thus requires attention towards the uncertainties associated with the assessment methods when applied in practice as well as the maintenance actions these support. These uncertainties cannot be solely described as model uncertainties but are also a result of the variation in engineering performance observed in practice. In the current paper a rational and systematic framework is presented which provides practical decision support concerning whether condition assessments are necessary, what assessment methods are recommended, if invasive actions are needed, or if some other non-invasive option may be more appropriate. The framework takes into account three main attributes of an enhanced condition assessment, namely, modelling sophistication, considerations of uncertainties and risks, and knowledge/information content. Increasing the level of one or more of these attributes may be advantageous only if the expected benefits or added value of information is considered appropriate in relation to the cost of implementation in practice. A decision making model, based on Bayesian decision theory, is adopted to evaluate this problem. Two case studies, in which the framework is applied, are provided for illustrative purposes; the first is a generic numerical example and the second a decision scenario related to the fatigue assessment of an existing railway bridge. (Less)
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author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
in
Structural Safety
volume
81
article number
101874
publisher
Elsevier
external identifiers
  • scopus:85073646240
ISSN
0167-4730
DOI
10.1016/j.strusafe.2019.101874
project
BIG BRO – Decision support for maintenance and upgrading of existing transportation infrastructure
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
8c0cf67a-bc0f-4216-bd39-3d4ea89b1f4a
date added to LUP
2019-09-09 08:52:54
date last changed
2022-04-26 05:16:59
@article{8c0cf67a-bc0f-4216-bd39-3d4ea89b1f4a,
  abstract     = {{An essential aspect in the maintenance of existing bridges is the ability to adequately and accurately assess and evaluate the condition of the structure. Condition assessments, which can be carried out in any number of ways, provide valuable information concerning the actual state of a bridge, including the severity of potential damages, and form the basis for further maintenance decisions. Any decision support concerning the management of existing structures thus requires attention towards the uncertainties associated with the assessment methods when applied in practice as well as the maintenance actions these support. These uncertainties cannot be solely described as model uncertainties but are also a result of the variation in engineering performance observed in practice. In the current paper a rational and systematic framework is presented which provides practical decision support concerning whether condition assessments are necessary, what assessment methods are recommended, if invasive actions are needed, or if some other non-invasive option may be more appropriate. The framework takes into account three main attributes of an enhanced condition assessment, namely, modelling sophistication, considerations of uncertainties and risks, and knowledge/information content. Increasing the level of one or more of these attributes may be advantageous only if the expected benefits or added value of information is considered appropriate in relation to the cost of implementation in practice. A decision making model, based on Bayesian decision theory, is adopted to evaluate this problem. Two case studies, in which the framework is applied, are provided for illustrative purposes; the first is a generic numerical example and the second a decision scenario related to the fatigue assessment of an existing railway bridge.}},
  author       = {{Björnsson, Ivar and Larsson Ivanov, Oskar and Honfi, Daniel and Leander, John}},
  issn         = {{0167-4730}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Elsevier}},
  series       = {{Structural Safety}},
  title        = {{Decision support framework for bridge condition assessments}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.strusafe.2019.101874}},
  doi          = {{10.1016/j.strusafe.2019.101874}},
  volume       = {{81}},
  year         = {{2019}},
}