Full-scale downburst damage versus boundary layer wind tunnel pressures : a survey analysis
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Northeastern University
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On the night of January 29, 2016 a thunderstorm event was registered in Porto Alegre, Brazil. The winds
caused damage throughout the majority of the city, leaving more than 220,000 houses without electricity and
thousands without water. An approaching cold front encountering moist warm air led to the formation of a
supercell over the whole metropolitan area. The event was defined as a macroburst by meteorologists due to
its characteristics and destruction patterns, but only three anemometers recorded velocity readings of the
event. This meteorological event offered an opportunity to check and compare, in full-scale and under a
downburst flow, the behaviour of buildings previously tested in a conventional Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel.
Six 80m tall buildings and two football stadiums were analysed. The buildings presented damage to the façade
cladding, while the stadiums remained undamaged. In three of the most affected building the pressure
distribution diagrams on the building façades, obtained from the wind tunnel study, show a direct
correspondence with the damaged zones of the full-scale buildings analysed. Although the flow characteristics
of downburst winds and conventional boundary layer simulations of synoptic winds may be different, it may
be concluded from the full-scale survey that the use of current conventional wind tunnel simulations is still a
valuable tool in the prediction of wind loads of most meteorological events that generate extreme winds in
Brazil.
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Loredo Souza, Acir Mércio, et al., 2016. Full-scale downburst damage versus boundary layer wind tunnel pressures: a survey analysis. En: 8º International Colloquium on Bluff Body Aerodynamics and Applications. Massachusetts: Northeastern University, p. 1-10.
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