scholarly journals Seismic Damage Estimation in Buried Pipelines Due to Future Earthquakes – The Case of the Mexico City Water System

Author(s):  
Omar A. ◽  
Mario Ordaz
2020 ◽  
pp. 026377582093805
Author(s):  
Alejandro De Coss-Corzo

This article introduces the concept of patchwork to understand how repair practices are carried out in Mexico City’s networked hydraulic infrastructure.Drawing on data gathered through a one-year participatory ethnography, patchwork follows the Mexico City Water System (SACMEX) workers’ descriptions of their own labor and how it relates to infrastructure in a context of structural austerity and rapid socio-material change. To do so, the article separates the analysis of repair practices from the logic of maintenance, challenging widely shared conceptions of how they relate to each other. Two distinct contributions are made possible by this move. On the one hand, it allows for a more detailed conceptualization of the work that repair labor does in relation to infrastructure and to other socio-material processes that are constantly shaping it. On the other, it enables an exploration of what I call the logic of adaptation, a form of infrastructure repair that is based not on returning objects and relations to a previously officially sanctioned order, but instead on fashioning normality as an ongoing process made possible through improvisational and incremental work. Exploring this logic, I argue that the endurance of urban infrastructure and of urban modernity requires the ad-hoc work of patchwork and of adaptive repair labor.


Water ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (8) ◽  
pp. 1023 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jorge Morales-Novelo ◽  
Lilia Rodríguez-Tapia ◽  
Daniel Revollo-Fernández

Economic and population growth in Mexico City (CDMX) is the main cause of an increase in water demand against a naturally limited endowment, which increases the gap between water demand and supply. In a water scarcity environment, households are facing pressure to maintain their involvement in the city’s only operating body, the Water System of Mexico City (SACMEX) total supply. The objective of this work is to measure the inequality in the distribution of drinking water and water subsidies between households connected to the public network of CDMX in order to generate objective indicators of the phenomenon. Having such information provides a baseline scenario of the problem and allows for the delineation of a policy covering the minimum levels of well-being in the supply of drinking water that is appropriate for the most important city in the country. The method consists of measuring inequality through continuous variables estimating the Lorenz curve, the Gini coefficient, the targeting coefficient and elasticity in water consumption and in water subsidies among households in CDMX. Data comes from a household survey carried out in 2011, Consumption Habits, Service and Quality of Water by Household in Mexico City (EHCSCA). Results show that drinking water and subsidies present a regressive distribution, benefit high-income households and, to a lesser degree, the poorest households in the city and highlight the urgency and importance for SACMEX to redefine its policy on water distribution, fees and subsidies. The present study’s scope can contribute to the monitoring of the distribution of drinking water and of subsidies among household groups. The study justifies that the indicators employed in this work can be used and are recommended as a valuable tool in water management, especially in a dynamic environment.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (2_suppl) ◽  
pp. 199-212
Author(s):  
Mario E Rodriguez

This work evaluates the damage to and collapse of a set of buildings in the September 2017 earthquake in Mexico City; these buildings were also subjected to the September 1985 Mexico City earthquake. These buildings were located in the area of the highest rate of damage or collapse in 1985, but buildings exhibiting significant damage or collapse in 2017 did not possess any retrofitting. The spectral demands for these buildings, based on typical records registered in the earthquakes of 1985 and 2017, were not much different, suggesting the need to explain why the buildings that collapsed suffered severe damage in 2017 but not in 1985. This building behavior was analyzed using a seismic damage index Id, previously proposed by the author, which considers the effect of cumulative damage. The results indicated that the observed damage to and collapse of these buildings in the September 2017 earthquake can be explained by the effect of cumulative seismic damage. Recommendations are given for possible improvements to the seismic building codes in Mexico.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. B. Raúl ◽  
B. J. Eduardo ◽  
R. M. Cesar

1981 ◽  
Vol 9 (2) ◽  
pp. 93-115 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Scawthorn ◽  
H. Iemura ◽  
Y. Yamada

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