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John W. van de Lindt

Researcher at Colorado State University

Publications -  290
Citations -  5511

John W. van de Lindt is an academic researcher from Colorado State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Shear wall & Seismic analysis. The author has an hindex of 34, co-authored 271 publications receiving 4074 citations. Previous affiliations of John W. van de Lindt include Oregon State University & Michigan Technological University.

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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Correlation of Observed Damage and FEMA 356 Drift Limits: Results from One-Story Woodframe House Shake Table Tests

TL;DR: In this article, the results of a series of uni-axial shake table tests performed at Colorado State University on a one-story woodframe house were used to determine the correlation between the FEMA 356 suggested drift limits and qualitative damage descriptions.

Full-scale shake table test of a two story mass-timber building with resilient rocking walls

TL;DR: The NHERI TallWood project as mentioned in this paper is a U.S. National Science Foundation-funded four-year research project focusing on the development of a resilient tall wood building design philosophy.
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A procedure for rapid visual screening for seismic safety of wood-frame dwellings with plan irregularity

TL;DR: In this article, the SAPWood software was used to perform a series of nonlinear time-history analyses for 480 representative models, covering different combinations of plan shapes, numbers of floors, base-rectangular areas, shape aspect ratio, area percentage cutoffs, window and door openings, and garage doors.
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ABV Procedure Combined with Mechanistic Response Modeling for Roof- and Surge-Loss Estimation in Hurricanes

TL;DR: In this article, a mechanistic assembly based vulnerability (ABV) procedure was developed to quantify damage to residential structures as a result of hurricanes in United States coastal regions, where several notable hurricanes made landfall along the Gulf Coast of the United States, resulting in billions of dollars in damage and loss of human life.
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Developing measurement science for community resilience assessment

TL;DR: In this paper, community resilience depends on the performance of the built environment and on supporting social, economic and public institutions which are essential for the recovery of a community following a disaster.