Characteristic Vertical Response of a Footbridge Due to Crowd Loading

Colin C. Caprani, Joe Keogh, Paul Archbold, Paul Fanning

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

The characteristic vertical vibration of a flexible footbridge subject to crowd loading is examined in this paper. Typically, bridge vibrations produced from a crowd of pedestrians are estimated by using an enhancement factor applied to the effect caused by a single pedestrian. In this paper, a single pedestrian model, represented by a spring mass damper, which incorporates variables such as pedestrian mass and body stiffness, is used to calibrate a computationally efficient moving force model. This calibrated moving force model is further used in Monte Carlo simulations of non-homogenous crowds to estimate characteristic vertical vibration levels. Enhancement factors, which could be applied to simple single pedestrian moving force models in estimating the response due to a crowd are thus derived. Such enhancement factors are then compared to previously published values. It is found that the greatest difference between the spring mass damper and moving force models respectively occurs when the bridge frequency is at the mean crowd pacing frequency. For bridges with frequencies even slightly removed from this mean, moving force models appear adequate.
Original languageEnglish
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2011
EventEuroDyn: 8th International Conference on Structural Dynamics - Leuven, Belgium
Duration: 4 Jul 20116 Jul 2011

Conference

ConferenceEuroDyn: 8th International Conference on Structural Dynamics
Country/TerritoryBelgium
CityLeuven
Period4/07/116/07/11

Keywords

  • characteristic vertical vibration
  • flexible footbridge
  • crowd loading
  • pedestrian mass
  • body stiffness
  • moving force model
  • Monte Carlo simulations
  • non-homogenous crowds
  • enhancement factors
  • bridge frequency
  • pacing frequency

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