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The Custody of the Holy Land, with own and EU funds, and in Partnership with UNHabitat, is implementing a comprehensive rehabilitation Project in Dar Al Consul civic and residential complex, which is one of the Custody properties in the heart of the Old City of Jerusalem. The complex, which corresponds to a urban block of relevant dimensions (80 x 50m x 5 levels above and below the ground) and intersects the Roman Cardo, consists of 40 Houses and a basement floor used as a closed storage at the street level, besides sharing part of its ground floor with the old city market. Prior to the planned rehabilitation works in the houses - to improve the living conditions – and in the basement - to be reused as public space- the Custody intended to conduct a safety assessment of the complex for both static and seismic loads, in order to integrate any needed strengthening work within the planned restoration activities. A series of technical activities were then carried out aimed at evaluating the safety conditions of the structures. A comprehensive investigation campaign was planned and executed in order to characterize the structural materials and define the constructive techniques. Several modelling strategies of the structures, which resulted particularly complex for the historical stratification of the site, were then used. By means of numerical modelling, the stresses were defined in the masonry elements by weight and by occurrence of a seismic event, allowing to highlight the insufficient safety conditions of the main resisting elements of the basement and subsequently to define adequate structural consolidation strategies. During the works, the need for archaeological excavation implied further engineering efforts in order to allow deep excavations avoiding any harm to the above positioned levels and structural portions.
[1] Dar Counsel Rehabilitation Project Old city Analysis report STRUCTURAL ASSESSMENT Investigation and tests (2014) - unpublished
[2] Jubeh N. Dar al-Qunsul archaeological report (2015) – unpublished
[3] Arce, A. Ratisbonne y el santuario del Ecce Homo. Tierra Santa, tomo 33 – n. 354 (1958), p. 201
[4] Recio Veganzones, A. Dos inscripciones de Beyrouth conservadas en Jerusalén. Liber annuus 20 (1970), pp. 118-137
[5] Kark R. and Oren-Nordheim M., Jerusalem and its Environs, (2001), p. 58
[6] Casarin, F. Dal al Consul, Old City Jerusalem, EXPIN technical report – investigation campaign on the structures (2015) – unpublished.
[7] Casarin F. et al. (2019) Mechanical Characterization of Masonry Typologies in Israel via Flat Jack Tests. In: Aguilar R., Torrealva D., Moreira S., Pando M.A., Ramos L.F. (eds) Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions. RILEM Bookseries, vol 18. Springer, Cham
[8] Italian Technical Standards for Constructions, Ministerial Decree 17 jan 2018 and related explicative circular (Infrastructure & Transportation Ministry) 21 jan 2019, n. 7
[9] Casarin, F. Dal al Consul, Old City Jerusalem, EXPIN technical report – structural analysis – current state (2015) – unpublished.
[10] Israel standard SI 413 – June 1995 – Design provisions for earthquake resistance of structures – The standards institution of Israel;
[11] Israel standard SI 412 – May 1992 – Loads on structures: characteristics loads – The standards institution of Israel.
Published on 30/11/21
Submitted on 30/11/21
Volume Interdisciplinary projects and case studies, 2021
DOI: 10.23967/sahc.2021.284
Licence: CC BY-NC-SA license
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