Published January 18, 2024 | Version v1
Publication

Structural safety assessment of geometrically complex masonry vaults by non-linear analysis. The Chapel of the Wurzburg Residence (Germany)

Description

This paper addresses the structural safety assessment of the Chapel of the Würzburg Residence (Germany), one of the most important churches of the Central European Baroque. It was declared as World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1981, one of its most unique and distinctive characteristics is the geometry of its complex vaults. Intersections between vaults are warped and vaults surfaces were built using only one layer of brick masonry. In this work, a nonlinear finite elements (FE) model has been developed and used to assess the structural safety of the building. In order to update the model by identifying the dynamic response of the building, experimental ambient vibration tests have been previously subsequently carried out. Operational Modal Analysis (OMA) has been used to experimentally identify both modal displacements and natural frequencies. The numerical FE model is them adjusted using genetic algorithms until its dynamic response resembles that experimentally observed, thus providing a valid model to further analyse the structural behaviour of the building. After briefly descripting the Chapel, the methodology followed to update the numerical model and the obtained results from a non-linear analysis on this over-complex vaulted structure are the main goals of the paper.

Additional details

Created:
January 20, 2024
Modified:
January 20, 2024