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| TALL
ORDER Haifa high-rise and other post-1922 structures
have extra protection. |
There are few countries
that can match the experience Israel has in designing protective
structures. Military threats to population centers along the
borders forced Israelis into the field decades ago. As early
as 1969, the country began gradually adapting military expertise
for civilian use.
Large-scale investments in securing
buildings began in the early 1970s. The primary threat was
along Israels border with Lebanon, where Palestinians
and Lebanese fighters manned mobile Katyusha rocket launchers
and artillery batteries. The attacks led to the design and
construction of protected rooms in northern Israels
homes, schools and public buildings.
The 1991 Gulf War introduced Scud
attacks, which increased the possibility of chemical and biological
attacks. Saddam Husseins missiles prompted a change
in national policy on the protection of civilians and building
codes.
"Over the years the threats
have changed. We have modified our techniques to deal with
the changing environment," says Reuben Eytan, a 61-year-old
civil engineer who began his career in the late 1960s in the
Israel Defense Forces (IDF) Corps of Engineers, where
he headed the fortification branch. During his tour of duty,
he worked on the Bar-Lev line, a string of fortifications
along the Suez Canal and over the years has played an important
role in adapting military techniques for protecting civilians.
Upon leaving the service, Eytan
in 1974 set up his own firm with his wife Michaela, a licensed
architect. Eytan Building Design now is the largest of a handful
of Israeli engineering firms specializing in security. It
has been involved in nearly every major military and civilian
project with protective structures.
The Sept. 11 attacks served as
a wake-up call for engineers and architects in the U.S. But
in Israel, protecting and hardening structures against terrorist
attacks is standard procedure. Until the early 1990s, most
buildings had bomb shelters and public shelters were scattered
throughout the country.
The incoming Scudsbringing
with them the threat of weapons of mass destruction and a
warning time of just a few minutes, at bestchanged priorities.
Bringing people to a shelter was no longer practical, but
"bringing protection to the public wherever they happened
to be" became more critical, says Eytan. Architects and
engineers began to focus on protected spaces within buildings.
In 1992, IDFs Home Front
Command introduced new technical specifications into civil
defense law. Two years ago, Eytans office drew up the
design manual for architects and engineers detailing the security
requirements. Residential plans typically specify a bedroom
or another designated room on each floor of an apartment building
for use by several families in an emergency.
The protected spaces are built
to withstand blast and shrapnel from various conventional
weapons as well as protection against chemical and biological
agents. With reinforced concrete walls, ceilings and floors
20 to 30 cm thick, they feature heavy-duty airtight steel-framed
windows and doors.
In high-rise buildings, the protected
spaces are adjacent to staircases for easy access. Ideally,
most protected spaces are fully integrated into the structural
frame of the building, thereby increasing the resistance to
horizontal forces.
The windows and doors are designed
to offer increased protection in conjunction with gas masks,
which are distributed to the entire population. Air filtration
units offer an even higher level of protection. Recommended
but not required in residences, the filter units are far more
common in commercial buildings.
The law also designated the construction
of larger and stronger protected spaces in all new commercial
and public buildings. Unlike the past when shelters were the
norm, the protected space became an integral part of the buildings
daily use.
The Home Front regulations call
for an allocation of 1.25 sq meters of potential space per
person in public buildings. The space itself is to be placed
in close proximity to stairs, which must be protected by 20-cm-thick
concrete walls. Commercial builders can reduce protected space
requirements by 30% by incorporating advanced chemical-biological
filtration units into a buildings ventilation system.
Dozens of skyscrapers have been
built in Israel since the new regulations went into effect.
Buildings like the Aviv Tower, the highest in the Middle East
with 66 stories, are required to have protected spaces on
each floor. In addition, all tall structures have a core of
reinforced concrete.
A government buildings program
in Jerusalem and six other regional centers constitute the
largest public works effort undertaken since the new regulations
came into force. The $1-billion-plus effort got under way
in 1993 and includes buildings at 20 sites. It involves construction
of over 400,000 sq m of space and includes buildings for various
ministries, courts and other government offices.
"When the project began, there
were minimal security requirements. But after the wave of
suicide bombings in the mid-1990s, we upgraded the security
specifications," says Yair Artsi, chief engineer for
the project. His Tel Aviv-based firm, Constructing Project
Management (CPM) Ltd., won the construction management contract.
Eytan Building Design signed on as security consultant.
The first move was to standardize
security of all new government buildings. The specifications
are general in nature, but Artsi says that construction is
designed to withstand car bombs and other threats. Some buildings,
such as the new foreign ministry office in Jerusalem, received
an extra level of security. Bollards and a security wall ring
most of the perimeter. There are designated protected spaces
in all of the new buildings, but they are designed for daily
use.
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| TEAM
Eytans bring architectural and engireering skills to the
table. |
The extra security does not come
cheap. "We estimate the additional cost at 8 to 14% of
actual construction costs," says Artsi. Eytan puts the
cost at up to 2% of project costs.
Thousands of protected rooms have
been built over the past 30 years in northern Israel. Few
changes have been implemented in the actual design specifications.
"The protected rooms have worked and the proof is the
low number of civilian casualties from rockets and other types
of attacks," says Eytan.
In some cases, important public
buildings have been strengthened further with retrofits. Seven
years ago, the Magen David Adom (Israels Red Cross)
emergency clinic in Kiryat Shemona added 60-cm-thick protecting
walls to the existing 46-cm walls. The clinic also received
blast-resistant windows and an additional metal roof layer.
Israels experience in protective
building design has given its practitioners instant international
credibility. A quarter of Eytan Building Designs work
is outside of Israel and Eytan expects to find more work in
the U.S. as security concerns increase.
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