Print Email Facebook Twitter The History of Safety Factors for Dutch Regional Dykes Title The History of Safety Factors for Dutch Regional Dykes Author De Gast, T. Vardon, P.J. Jommi, C. Hicks, M.A. Faculty Civil Engineering and Geosciences Department Geoscience and Engineering Date 2015-10-16 Abstract Regular dyke assessment is part of reducing the risk of flooding in the Netherlands. 18 000 km of dykes are assessed at regular intervals, of which 14 000 km are classified as regional dykes and their main aim is to defend polders from inundating. The methods of assessing regional dykes are strongly inter-twined with the methods of assessing primary dykes; however, regional dykes differ due to lower consequence levels and significantly shorter individual dyke lengths. Initially, local experience was relied upon for maintaining dykes, prior to the utilisation of soil mechanics calculations to determine the safety/stability of the dykes. Over the years, the approaches have been developed leading to different assessment criteria. This paper aims to give insight into the development of the assessment criteria for regional dykes in Dutch norms/guidelines since the devastating storm surge of 1953, starting with the probabilistic assessment of water heights and global factors for slope stability, through to the adaption of statistical models which enabled the use of partial factors in dyke assessment. Partial factors in assessments allow for improved and more detailed knowledge to limit the uncertainties and lead to more detailed assumptions in the calculations. The introduction of risk-based design enables assessment criteria based on the expected damage due to inundation. The paper discusses assumptions, levels of safety and information required to complete the assessment. Including consequence based assessment and risk based design, leads to a larger possible range in the required factors of safety. Subject dyepartial factorsslope stability assessment To reference this document use: http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:fc09f7c0-752d-4e96-95d7-57d6f72be329 Publisher IOS Press Source https://doi.org/10.3233/978-1-61499-580-7-364 Source Geotechnical Risk and Safety V; 5th International Symposium on Geotechnical Safety and Risk; Rotterdam (The Netherlands), 13-16 Oct. 2015 Part of collection Institutional Repository Document type conference paper Rights © 2015 The authors and IOS Press.This article is published online with Open Access by IOS Press and distributed under the termsof the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License. Files PDF STAL9781614995807-0364.pdf 224.36 KB Close viewer /islandora/object/uuid:fc09f7c0-752d-4e96-95d7-57d6f72be329/datastream/OBJ/view