2019 SDC Official Rules
2019 SDC Official Rules
2019 SDC Official Rules
OFFICIAL RULES
1. Introduction ......................................................................................................................... 4
1.1 Competition Objectives ...................................................................................................................................4
1.2 Problem Statement ..........................................................................................................................................4
1.3 Eligibility and Registration ............................................................................................................................. 6
1.4 Units ................................................................................................................................................................ 7
1.5 Summary of Notable Rule Changes for this Year ...........................................................................................7
2. Scoring .................................................................................................................................. 8
2.1 Design Proposal, Presentation, Poster, and Architecture.................................................................................8
2.2 Performance Predictions and Floor Area Calculations .................................................................................. 10
2.3 Annual Revenue ............................................................................................................................................ 12
2.4 Annual Building Cost .................................................................................................................................... 12
2.5 Annual Seismic Cost ..................................................................................................................................... 13
2.6 Final Annual Building Income ...................................................................................................................... 14
3. Competition Awards .......................................................................................................... 15
3.1 Competition Winner and Ranking ................................................................................................................. 15
3.2 Honorable Mentions ...................................................................................................................................... 15
3.3 Best Communication Skills Award ............................................................................................................... 15
3.4 Charles Richter Award for the Spirit of the Competition .............................................................................. 16
3.5 Egor Popov Award for Structural Innovation ................................................................................................ 16
4. Design Proposals and Damping Device Approval Process ............................................. 16
4.1 Design Proposals ........................................................................................................................................... 16
4.2 Damping Device Approval Process............................................................................................................... 18
5. Structural Model ................................................................................................................ 19
5.1 Structural Model Materials ............................................................................................................................ 19
5.2 Frame Members............................................................................................................................................. 19
5.3 Wall Members ............................................................................................................................................... 20
5.4 Connections ................................................................................................................................................... 20
5.5 Floor Dead Load Connections ....................................................................................................................... 22
5.6 Floors............................................................................................................................................................. 23
5.7 Structural Model Base Plate .......................................................................................................................... 26
5.8 Structural Model Roof Plate .......................................................................................................................... 28
5.9 Innovative Damping Devices ........................................................................................................................ 29
5.10 Building Finish .............................................................................................................................................. 30
5.11 Building Display Requirements .................................................................................................................... 30
5.12 Structural Model Weight ............................................................................................................................... 30
6. Strong Ground Motion Testing ........................................................................................ 30
6.1 Scaled Ground Motions ................................................................................................................................. 30
6.2 Shake Table ................................................................................................................................................... 31
6.3 Dead Load Specifications .............................................................................................................................. 31
6.4 Dead Load Installation .................................................................................................................................. 31
6.5 Attachment of Structural Model to the Shake Table ..................................................................................... 32
6.6 Instrumentation.............................................................................................................................................. 33
6.7 Data Processing ............................................................................................................................................. 33
6.8 Damage Calculations ..................................................................................................................................... 34
6.9 Penalties and Determining Collapse .............................................................................................................. 35
7. Score Sheets ........................................................................................................................ 36
7.1 Verification of Electronic Score Sheet Entry ................................................................................................ 37
Vancouver, British Columbia, located on the western coast of Canada, is known for
its urban livability and stunning natural backdrop. Vancouver, full of famous parks
and delicious seafood, is located near the edge of the Cascadia subduction zone,
where the Juan de Fuca, Pacific, and North American plates meet. Due to the Juan de
Fuca plate moving under the less dense North American plate, a prospective
megathrust earthquake is expected to develop approximately 300 kilometers off the
coast of Vancouver. In addition to this, deformation of the North America plate has
created many small shallow faults that could rupture as few as 10 kilometers beneath
the city. While not a megathrust earthquake, these smaller crustal ruptures could
cause more damage for the city due to their proximity.
Your company has been tasked with responding to a Request for Proposal (RFP) to
construct a new building in downtown Vancouver. The client has high expectations
that this new building will be an iconic structure and a celebrated addition to the
downtown area. Vancouver is the most densely populated city in Canada and as such
the client has purchased a smaller piece of land than anticipated. Additionally, Metro
Vancouver’s Regional Growth Strategy (RGS) encourages mixed-use development.
The client plans to leave two corners of the land for a small park and bike garage
leaving a T-shaped area for the building footprint. Consistent with conventional urban
use of multi-story buildings, the client would like to lease the lowermost level of the
structure as retail space. To maximize the value of this space, the height of the first
floor will be double of the typical floor height. The client also plans to lease the top
floor as retail space, capitalizing on the scenic views that downtown Vancouver
offers. The client has given you, the engineer and designer, the ability to decide how
the remaining stories in the building will be rented (residential, office, etc.). With its
Greenest City Initiative approved in July 2011, Vancouver is aiming to become the
greenest city in the world by 2020 and your building should feature efficient and
creative approaches to minimize the building’s carbon footprint.
To verify the seismic load-resisting system, a scaled balsa wood model of the
proposed building design will be constructed and tested. The model will be subjected
to two ground motions, representing earthquakes with different return periods. To
ensure life safety, the building model must not collapse during either of the ground
motions. The response of the model, quantified through roof drift and roof
acceleration, will be measured during the shaking. For each ground motion, the value
of the roof drift will be used to estimate the monetary losses due to damage in the
structural and non-structural building components. Likewise, the roof acceleration
will be used to estimate the monetary loss due to damaged equipment contained
inside the building. If collapse occurs, the monetary losses will account for
demolition, reconstruction, and downtime. Finally, the annual seismic cost will be
determined as the sum of the economic loss estimated for each of the earthquakes
divided by its return period.
• The Annual Revenue (Section 2.3) will be a function of the rentable floor area.
Bonuses in revenue will be given to those teams with the best design proposal,
architecture, presentation, and poster. These bonuses account for the positive
effect that quality architecture and effective communication skills can have on
increasing the value of the floor area to be sold or rented.
• The Annual Building Cost (Section 2.4) will be a function of the weight of the
building model. Penalties that increase the initial cost will be applied to those
models that do not meet all structural model requirements.
• The Annual Seismic Cost (Section 2.5) will be based on the building’s seismic
performance. A bonus will be given to the teams with the best performance
predictions. This bonus will reduce the seismic cost of the building. This accounts
for the fact that a detailed structural analysis can improve structural design and
lead to desired seismic performance.
The winner of the competition will be the team with the highest Final Annual
Building Income (Section 2.6) whose building is not deemed collapsed after both
ground motions. Teams whose buildings are deemed collapsed will be ranked in a
lower category than teams whose buildings are not deemed collapsed.
The following are the deadlines for the deliverables listed in Section 1.3.b.
Cutoff will be at 11:59 PM Pacific Time.
Submittal Deadline
Interest Survey Friday, November 2nd, 2018
Proposal Submittal Friday, November 2nd, 2018
Final Registration Tuesday, January, 15th, 2019
Floor Area Calculations &
Friday, March 1st, 2019
Performance Predictions
1.4 Units
All measured and specified parameters in the competition will be in English units,
inches and pounds.
To test the seismic performance of the design, a scaled balsa wood model that is representative
of a real building design must be constructed and tested. The model will be subjected to two
ground motions, which represent earthquakes with different return periods. To ensure life
safety, the client requires a design that does not collapse for either of the two ground motions.
In addition, the response of the model in terms of roof drift and roof acceleration will be
measured for the first ground motion and the value of the peak relative roof drift will be used
to estimate the monetary loss from damage to the structure. The response of the model in terms
of roof drift and roof acceleration is expected for shaking in both the North-South and East-
West directions. The roof acceleration will be used to estimate the monetary loss due to
damaged equipment contained inside the building. If a building is deemed collapsed (as
defined in Section 6.9), the monetary losses will account for demolition, reconstruction, and
downtime. Finally, the annual seismic cost will be the sum of the economic loss estimated for
each of the earthquakes divided by their respective return periods.
This section describes the method used to score the performance of the buildings in the seismic
competition. Scoring is based on three primary components: 1. Annual Revenue, 2. Annual
Building Cost, and 3. Annual Seismic Cost. The final measure of structural performance is the
Final Annual Building Income, which is calculated as the Annual Revenue minus the Annual
Building Cost minus the Annual Seismic Cost.
In the event of a tie for an award in any category, the architecture score will be used as the
tiebreaker.
Failure to complete any of the requirements in Sections 2.1.a and 2.1.b will result in
an increase in the factor V (Section 2.4). Specific penalties are quantified in each
section.
2.1.a Presentation
Each team is required to give an oral presentation no longer than seven
minutes to a panel of judges at the scheduled time for the team. Judges
will have up to five minutes to ask questions following the presentation.
The presentations will be open to the public.
For more information, please see the presentation judging rubric on the
competition website. Any team that does not present at the scheduled time
will have 100 added to V (Section 2.4).
Any team that does not email their final presentation by the deadline will
have 10 added to V (Section 2.4).
2.1.b Poster
Teams are required to display a poster providing an overview of the
project. Teams must submit their poster by email before the week of the
competition (check the official website for exact deadline). Individual
teams are responsible for providing the physical poster for display.
Any team that does not email their poster by the deadline will have 10
added to V (Section 2.4).
The dimensions of the poster are restricted to a height of 30 in. and a width
of 20 in. The minimum font size for all text shall not be less than 18.
Any team that does not have a poster in the display area meeting all
requirements in this section by the time listed in the schedule will receive
50 added to V (Section 2.4).
2.1.c Architecture
The architecture will be judged based on the aesthetic appeal of the
structural model. Renderings on the poster will be considered in the
architecture score. Refer to the competition website for the score rubric
that will be used.
Because not all teams have access to laser cutting, quality of member
fabrication will not be considered in the architectural judging.
The Analysis Prediction Score (APS) is used to evaluate the accuracy of the
predicted performance (taken to two significant figures). APS1 is for the
maximum absolute roof drift prediction while APS2 is for the peak roof
absolute acceleration. See Section 2.5 for how XPeak1 and APeak1 are
determined
𝐷𝑖𝑠𝑝
|𝑆𝑡𝑟𝑢𝑐𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑎𝑙1 𝑃𝑟𝑒𝑑𝑖𝑐𝑡𝑒𝑑 − 𝑋𝑃𝑒𝑎𝑘1 |
𝑀𝑜𝑑𝑒𝑙 𝐻𝑒𝑖𝑔ℎ𝑡
𝐴𝑃𝑆1 =
𝑋𝑃𝑒𝑎𝑘1
Each team will be ranked based on the accuracy of the predictions for
Ground Motion 1. Any team that does not submit a prediction by the
deadline will receive an APS equal to 100%. Any team with an APS value
greater than 100% will receive an APS value of 100%. The top ten teams
with the lowest APS, and with an APS values under 100%, are awarded an
Analysis Prediction Score Bonus (APS Bonus). If less than 10 teams have
APS values under 100%, then the APS Bonus will only be applied to those
teams (i.e. some bonus percentages may not be given). See Table 2-2 for
the percentage increase per rank.
The Annual Revenue is equal to the sum of each rentable floor area multiplied by its
respective revenue per square inch factor.
$
𝐶𝑜𝑛𝑠𝑡𝑟𝑢𝑐𝑡𝑖𝑜𝑛 𝐶𝑜𝑠𝑡 = 𝐶𝑐 = 2,500,000 [ ] × (𝑊𝑠 [𝑙𝑏])2 + 6 × 106 [$]
𝑙𝑏 2
Any violations will result in an increase in V and will contribute to the Additional
Construction Cost, Ca. The structural model weight, Ws, is defined in Section 5.12.
The building footprint, Af, is defined as the maximum floor plan area projected onto
the base plate with units squared inches. The number of approved damping device(s)
is Nd.
The structural damage as a percentage of the construction cost, XDn [%], and
equipment damage as a percentage of the equipment cost, ADn [%], for a given
ground motion n, are calculated using a cumulative distribution function (Section 6.8)
and are defined as follows:
The mean and standard deviation peak roof drift and mean and standard deviation
peak roof acceleration are defined as follows:
𝜇𝑋 = 1.5 [%]
𝜎𝑋 = 0.5 [%]
𝜇𝐴 = 1.75 [𝑔]
𝜎𝐴 = 0.7 [𝑔]
The measured peak roof drift, XPeakn [%], and measured peak roof acceleration,
APeakn [g] for a given ground motion n, are calculated using the absolute roof
If the structural model is not deemed collapsed (Section 6.9.c) after ground motion n
and all previous ground motions, the Economic Loss for the given ground motion, n,
will be equal to:
Teams will have the option of leaving the accelerometer in place during Ground
Motion 2. The data from the accelerometer will not be used for judging, therefore, if
the structural model does not collapse after Ground Motion 2, both XDn and ADn will
be equal to 50%.
If the structural model is deemed collapsed (Section 6.9.c) after ground motion n, the
Economic Loss for the given ground motion, n, and subsequent ground motions will
be equal to:
The Annual Economic Loss, AEL, for a given ground motion, n, is equal to:
𝐸𝑐𝑜𝑛𝑜𝑚𝑖𝑐 𝐿𝑜𝑠𝑠𝑛
𝐴𝐸𝐿𝑛 =
𝑅𝑒𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑛 𝑃𝑒𝑟𝑖𝑜𝑑𝑛
A penalty, Dn, for unsecured floor dead loads will be applied after each ground
motion (Section 6.9.a).
3. Competition Awards
Teams whose buildings collapse will be ranked in a lower category than teams whose
buildings do not collapse. Within each category, teams will be ranked based on the
Final Annual Building Income, FABI.
The teams ranked overall 2nd and 3rd will also be awarded.
▪ An Honorable Mention for Best Architecture will be awarded to the team ranked
1st in architecture.
▪ An Honorable Mention for Best Seismic Performance will be awarded to the team
with the lowest Final Annual Seismic Cost, FASC.
The SLC reserves the right to assess a penalty of a 5% reduction in the communication score to
any team which demonstrates unprofessional written or oral communication to the SLC members
at any time leading up to or during the competition.
• The proposal shall not exceed 3 pages. Any proposal exceeding the page limit
will not be scored.
• Plagiarism is strictly prohibited and may result in disqualification or non-
invitation to compete. Any citation style is accepted, as long as it is consistent.
A PDF of the document must be emailed to the SDC Chairs at the following email
address by the date listed on the competition website. The SDC Chairs will confirm
the submission.
Prior to approval, judges will evaluate the proposed damping device(s) and may ask
for testing results and predicted design forces from a computer model (e.g., subjected
to Ground Motion 2) to prove the damping devices would dissipate energy. If the
judges ask for additional information about the proposed damping device(s), that
information must be provided within fourteen days of the initial request. Failure to
provide the requested information to the judges within the specified time frame will
result in the damping device(s) not being approved. Pre-approved damping devices
are not required to be used in the submitted structural model at the competition.
However, if a damping proposal is not submitted, then damping devices may not be
used.
The criteria used by the judges to approve a damping system are as follows:
• If the damping system is removed, the balsa wood structure, with all dead
load weights attached, should be stable and firmly fixed to the base plate.
• The primary purpose of the pre-approved damping devices is to dissipate
energy.
• Base or floor isolation of any kind is prohibited.
General notes:
• Damping devices may be attached to the base plate.
• All damping devices must dissipate energy at each location used in the
structural model.
• Any material is allowed to manufacture a damping device.
• Nonlinear springs may be used for hysteretic damping but testing data and
expected model forces at the desired use locations will not be required.
If a damping device is approved, the damping device shall not deviate from the
damping device approved through this process in the final structural model. The
damping device may only be located at the approved locations. The damping device
must not interfere with dead load installation locations.
5. Structural Model
This section describes the rules and limitations to be followed for the structural model. Most
violations will result in penalties added to V (Section 2.4). Some violations may result in
disqualification. Penalties will be given in accordance with the official rules and at the
discretion of the judges. The SLC reserves the right to cap violations as needed in accordance
with the spirit of the competition.
Structural models shall be constructed of only balsa wood (Section 5.1) frame members
(Section 5.2) and balsa wood wall members (Section 5.3) that are attached to a structural model
base plate (Section 5.7) with a structural model roof plate attached on top of the structural
model (Section 5.8). Pre-approved damping devices may be made of any material (Section
5.9). All connections requirements are provided in Section 5.4. Floor labels (Section 5.11) and
the school name at the top of the building (Section 5.11) may be constructed out of paper.
Any architectural features (i.e., features not intended for structural purposes) on the model
must be made of balsa wood (Section 5.1) and meet all the requirements for a frame member
(Section 5.2) or wall member (Section 5.3) including all connection requirements (Section 5.4).
All frame members and wall members shall be made of balsa wood.
Each individual frame member in its final state attached to the model shall
fit in a 0.200 in. by 0.200 in. by 15.000 in. box.
Any frame member to frame member connections not easily visible to the
naked eye shall be marked with a black arrow pointing to the connection.
Each individual wall member in its final state attached to the model shall
fit in a 0.100 in. by 3.000 in. by 11.000 in. box.
A wall member shall span at least 1.50 in. vertically. Measured parallel to
the plane of the base plate, one of the measured dimensions shall measure
at least 1 in.
Individual wall members will not be removed from the model to check the
requirements for this section. Instead, a caliper or other measuring device
will be used to check the requirements for this section. Judges must be
able to visually observe the extent of all members for measuring. Judges
reserve the right to use destructive inspection methods after completion
of shaking and assess penalties in this section.
5.4 Connections
5.4.a Connection Requirements
Each violation of this section will result in 3 added to V.
All frame members and wall members in contact with the base plate must
be glued to the base plate.
All frame members and wall members in contact with the roof plate must
be glued to the roof plate.
Any frame members in contact shall have glue between the faying
surfaces of the frame members. The faying surface is defined as the
surface or portion of a surface of a frame member in direct contact with
the surface or portion of a surface of another frame member.
A faying surface shall not exceed 1 in. in any direction from the centroid
of the faying surface. For each inch that a faying surface exceeds the 1 in.
maximum (e.g. 2 in. faying surface), an additional 3 V will be added. If
frame members are laminated, such as in a column, each surface in contact
with another surface will be considered a faying surface.
Excess glue is any glue more than ½ an inch away in any direction from
a fraying surface (Teams should take care when choosing and applying
glue to connections).
Gusset plates are permitted but shall not be in contact with any wall
members. A gusset plate shall be in contact with at least two frame
members in contact. Individual gusset plates shall not be in contact with
one another. Each gusset plate shall fit in a 0.100 in. by 1 in. by 1 in. box.
For each member that was designed as a gusset plate that exceeds the
0.100 in by 1 in by 1 in box, a penalty of 3 will be added to V. All gusset
plate surfaces or portion(s) of gusset plate surfaces in contact with frame
members shall be glued. Excess glue shall be confined to 1/2 in. in any
Individual gusset plates will not be removed from the model to check the
requirements for this section. Instead, a caliper will be used to check the
requirements for this section.
Any wall members in contact shall have glue between the faying surfaces
of the wall members. The faying surface is defined as the surface or
portion of a surface of a wall member in direct contact with the surface or
portion of a surface of another wall member.
Excess glue is any glue more than ½ an inch away in any direction from
a faying surface (Teams should take care when choosing and applying
glue to connections). There is no restriction on length of faying surface in
wall member to wall member connections.
Any frame member and wall member in contact shall have glue between
the faying surfaces of the frame member and wall member. The faying
surface is defined as the surface or portion of a surface of a frame member
in direct contact with the surface or portion of a surface of a wall member.
Excess glue is any glue not between the faying surfaces but in contact
with glue between a faying surface and shall be confined to 1/2 in. in any
direction of the edge of any faying surface (Teams should take care when
choosing and applying glue to connections). There is no restriction on
length of faying surface in frame member to wall member connections.
Floor dead load connections are required in both North-South and East-
West directions and to be centered in plan-view in relation to the center
of the base plate.
Floor dead loads will be secured to the structure using nuts and washers.
The connection should be strong enough for the team to tighten the nuts
enough to engage adequate friction between the inner-most washer and
the exterior face of the building to ensure the floor dead load is secure (see
Section 6.4.a)
5.6 Floors
5.6.a Floor and Roof Requirements
Each violation of this section will result in 5 added to V. The total number
of floors, F, of the structural model must be equal to or between the
minimum or maximum number of floors. A floor is defined in Section
5.6.b.
For a given elevation, there shall not be more than one independent floor
as defined in Section 5.6.b.
Rentable floor area may only be within the continuous perimeter beams
of the floor (Section 5.6.b).
Measured perpendicular along the plane of the floor from any perimeter
beam, interior beam, or vertical wall member at the floor elevation, no
span to another perimeter beam, interior beam, or vertical wall member
shall be greater than 2.5 in or smaller than 0.5 in.
Each rentable floor area is calculated using the total plan area defined by
the perimeter beams, meeting the Section 5.6.b and this section’s
requirements. Individual structural members penetrating the rentable floor
area (frame members and wall members) are not subtracted from the
rentable floor area.
The total rentable floor area will be calculated by summing the individual
rentable floor areas from the bottom up. If the maximum rentable total
floor area is reached, the remaining rentable floor areas above will not
count.
The minimum height clearance for rentable floor area is 2.25 in.
Occupants on the rentable floor must be able to access any area of the
rentable floor through at least two access points or doorways originating
from the interior of the structure. The exterior of the building may not be
used as an access point. Additionally, occupants on the lobby floor, or f
=1, should be able to access the exterior of the building through at least
two access points or doorways. A sufficient access point is defined as a
clear opening with the following minimum dimensions:
Width: 1 in.
Height: 2.25 in.
If there is more than one independent floor area for a given floor, the
largest rentable floor area for that floor will count as the only rentable
floor area.
The wood base plate shall be between 0.25 in. to 0.50 in. thick.
Notching the base plate is allowed but only at locations where a frame
member or wall member are in contact with the base plate. The notched
area must be filled in completely with the frame member, wall member,
or glue. Glue may not be present 1/4 in. from the edge of any member
breaking the plane of the top of the base plate visible from the top of the
base plate. Each violation of the requirements for notching the base plate
will result in 5 added to V.
On the top of the base plate, a letter ‘N’ or the word ‘North’ shall be
written with black permanent marker within 1 in. from the North edge and
within 6 in. of the East edge of the base plate.
The bottom of the base plate must be flat and smooth. If the judges deem
the structural model cannot be firmly affixed to the shake table, the
accelerometer will not be attached to the structural model and maximum
damage will be assumed for the first ground motion. If the structural
model cannot be physically attached to the shake table, the structural
model will not be tested, and the structural model will be assumed
A hole, no larger than 1/4 in. diameter, may be drilled no further than 2
inches from each corner to secure the structural model for shipping. That
means a total of four holes may be drilled in the base plate for securing
the model to ship.
A second identical wood base plate shall be provided by the team for
judges to weigh in lieu of weighing the base plate attached to the structural
model. The second identical base plate shall have the name of the school
written in black permanent marker. If the judges deem the second base
plate is not identical, the judges will assign the base plate a tare weight of
0.0 lbs. Identical notching is not necessary in the second base plate.
Failure to provide a second identical wood base plate will result in the tare
weight of the plate to be 0.0 lbs. Therefore, the weight of the base plate
will be included in the Structural Model Weight Ws (Section 6.12) used
for scoring purposes.
The roof plate thickness shall be between 0.3 in. and 0.4 in. Therefore,
teams are recommended to use 3/8 in. plywood or MDF plates and
independently verify that the measured thickness falls within the indicated
range.
Notching the roof plate is allowed, but only at locations where a frame
member or wall member are in contact with the roof plate. The notched
area must be filled in completely with the frame member, wall member,
or glue. Glue may not be present 1/4 in. from any edge of a member
breaking the plane of the bottom of the roof plate visible from the bottom
of the roof plate. Each violation of the requirements for notching the roof
plate will result in 5 added to V.
The top of the roof plate must be flat and smooth. If the judges deem the
accelerometer is not firmly affixed to the structural model using two C-
clamps (scaled drawings of the C-clamps will be provided in the design
guide), the accelerometer will not be attached to the structural model.
A second identical wood roof plate shall be provided by the team for
judges to weigh in lieu of weighing the roof plate attached to the structural
model. The second identical roof plate shall have the name of the school
written in black permanent marker. If the judges deem the second roof
plate is not identical, the judges will assign the roof plate a tare weight of
0.0 lbs. Identical notching is not necessary in the second roof plate. Failure
to provide a second identical wood roof plate will result in the tare weight
of the plate to be 0.0 lbs. Therefore, the weight of the roof plate will be
included in the Structural Model Weight Ws (Section 6.12) used for
scoring purposes.
The finish on all frame and wall members must be bare wood. Paint or other
coatings will not be allowed on any portion of the model. Burned surfaces from
laser cutting are permitted.
The school name shall be displayed at the top of the building facing all four cardinal
directions (North, East, South, and West), on paper (a non-structural element). The
dimensions of each paper are restricted to 6 in. by 1.5 in.
Each floor must be legibly labeled for judges to see. The floor at the base of the
building is not required to be labeled. The floor above the lobby shall be labeled
‘2’, and so on. The label may be written on the balsa wood structure with a pen or
marker, or small pieces of paper may be attached with the floor labels written on
the pieces of paper. The label must not be designed to assist in the structural
performance or interfere with the installation of the dead weights.
Due to the capacity limits on the shake table, the structural model shall not be
approved for shake table testing and will be deemed collapsed for all ground
motions if the weight of the structural model, damping devices, base plate and
roof plate exceed 5.0lb.
The building will be subjected to two ground motions of increasing intensity. The structural
response to both ground motions will contribute to the annual seismic cost.
Each team will have at least 8 minutes to install the dead loads. If 8
minutes have passed and the team has not finished installing the floor dead
loads, a penalty of 20 will be added to V. Teams may recruit other non-
team members (excluding SDC Chairs) to assist in installing floor dead
loads.
A SDC Chair shall be present while the team is installing the floor dead
loads to ensure proper installation of the floor dead loads. Another SDC
Chair shall check the floor dead loads before the structural model is
attached to the shake table (Section 6.5). If the SDC Chair finds any
weights free to move in any translational direction, the SDC Chair shall
notify the team captain prior to shaking. The team will have one minute
to tighten the floor dead loads. After one minute, the team will not be able
to make any changes to the structural model or dead loads, shaking shall
commence, and unsecured floor dead loads will be penalized after each
ground motion as described in Section 7.9a.
6.6 Instrumentation
Two accelerometers will be used in the competition: one accelerometer will be
attached to the shake table, and the other accelerometer will be part of the roof dead
load (Section 6.3).
1. Transfer the acceleration records into the frequency domain using a Fourier
transform.
2. Digitally high-pass filter the acceleration recordings in the frequency domain using
a 3rd order Butterworth filter with a corner frequency of 0.8 Hz.
3. Transfer the acceleration from the frequency domain to the time domain.
4. Numerically double integrate the filtered acceleration records over time to obtain
displacements.
A portion of the low-frequency range of the raw acceleration signals must be removed
using a digital filter prior to double integration because the low frequency content of
the signals is small compared to the noise. Highly unrealistic displacements would
be obtained if the raw data were integrated in time without first filtering some of the
low frequency content because of the low-frequency noise. An undesired but
unavoidable consequence of the filtering is that the low-frequency portion of the
acceleration signals, which contains permanent displacements, must be removed. As
a result, the displacements computed by double-integrating the acceleration records
are transient displacements; the low-frequency permanent component will not be
reflected in the computed displacement time series.
For each ground motion n, a roof acceleration record, Accln, and absolute roof
displacement record, ΔRoof n, and absolute base displacement record, ΔBase n, will be
available after post-processing.
0.8
0.6
XDn
0.4
0.2
0
0 0.005 0.01 0.015 0.02 0.025 0.03
XPeakn [%]
Figure 7-1: Function relating peak roof drift, XPeakn, and structural
damage as a percentage of construction cost (XDn)
0.8
0.6
ADn
0.4
0.2
0
0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5
APeakn [g]
For example, if all of the floor dead loads remain secured after Ground
Motion 1, the penalty D for Ground Motion 1 will be equal to 0%. If two
of the floor dead loads are found to be unsecured after Ground Motion 2,
the penalty D for Ground Motion 2 will be equal to 10%.
The floor levels will be checked with a level. If the whole bubble is
outside of the lines on the level, the floor is considered not level.
The frame members and/or walls attached to the base plate will be visually
inspected to see if separation has occurred between the member and the
base plate and/or the rest of the structural model.
If any of the conditions for collapse are met prior to Ground Motion 1, the
structural model will still be shaken but deemed collapsed for both ground
motions regardless of the outcome after shaking has completed.
7. Score Sheets
All score sheets can be reviewed and signed by the team captain immediately after judging has
completed. Only team captains shall discuss penalties and score sheets with the SDC Chairs
(Section 9).
At the team meeting, the SDC Chairs will indicate a time when team captains can begin to
come by the judging table to review the judging sheets. The indicated time may change
depending on the time required to review all the models.
Once the scoring sheets have been signed either by the team captain or two SDC Chairs, a team
captain may not make any appeals for the penalties assessed on the scoring sheets already
signed. If a team captain tries to make an appeal for penalties assessed on the scoring sheet(s)
already signed, the team captain will be warned. If after the team captain is warned and they
attempt to continue appealing for penalties assessed on the scoring sheet(s) already signed, the
team will be disqualified.
It is the duty of the team captain to review the information on this sheet for
typographical errors. Any such errors, especially those affecting the calculation of
scores, must be reported to the SDC Chairs, either in person or by email, before 9:00
PM competition local time of the evening before the awards ceremony. The SDC
Chairs will review the hard-copy score sheets, and will rectify any errors that are
reported in this way. If a team captain has not reported any errors by the deadline, it
Please note that this is not an opportunity to initiate any appeals (Section 9), or to
dispute the scores in any other way. This is only an opportunity to verify that the
information entered electronically is typographically consistent with the information
recorded on hard-copy (which has already been signed by the team captain or two
SDC Chairs, as explained above).
8. Rule Clarifications
All rule clarification requests and answers will be posted on the competition website. The
posted question and answer will also include the name of the school submitting the question.
To submit a rule clarification, the team captain must fill out and submit an online submission
form, which can be found on the competition website. Questions or clarifications about the
rules sent via email will not be answered. Be sure to read the rules, guide, and any other current-
year clarifications thoroughly before submitting a question.
The SDC Chairs have complete authority over the interpretation of the rules and oversight of
the competition and are responsible for scoring and decisions. All decisions made by the SDC
Chairs are final. If any questions arise during the competition, the team captain should ask one
of the SDC Chairs, not other SLC members.
Only a team captain may discuss decisions or appeals to SDC Chairs. SDC Chairs will refuse
to discuss a decision or appeal to anyone other than the team captain. A team captain may only
make an appeal regarding his or her team.
Under no circumstances may anyone other than the team captain approach a SDC Chair
regarding penalties or scoring. This includes but is not limited to other teammates, alumni,
professors, and especially other SLC members. If this becomes an issue, the team captain will
be warned, and in extreme cases, the SDC Chairs reserve the right to disqualify the team.
The SDC Chairs are not out to assess extraneous penalties. During judging process, the judges
are trained and supervised to evaluate all of the structural models for the same requirement(s)
so there is a consistency in judging. Please be considerate and respectful to the SDC Chairs
when making an appeal. The SDC Chairs strive to be fair and consistent with all teams
regarding the official rules.
In the interest of time, no appeals are allowed once shaking of the structures has
begun. The team captain may ask for an explanation on why their structure was
determined collapsed, but the buildings must be tested and moved along.
Plagiarism is strictly prohibited throughout the competition. Taken from [1], examples of
plagiarism include:
• Taking credit for any work created by another person.
• Copying any work belonging to another person without indicating that the information
is copied and properly citing the source of the work.
• If not directly copied, using another person’s presentation of ideas without putting it in
your own words or form and not giving proper citation
• Creating false citations that do not correspond to the information you have used.
So-called common knowledge does not need to be cited; for more information, see [2].