Concepedia

Concept

resilience (structural engineering)

Variants

Resilience Studies

Parents

2.4K

Publications

224.1K

Citations

6.8K

Authors

2.3K

Institutions

About

Resilience (structural engineering) is the capacity of a structural system, or a network of interconnected structures and infrastructure, to withstand, absorb, and recover from the effects of disruptive events, such as natural hazards (e.g., earthquakes, high winds, floods) or man-made threats (e.g., blasts). This concept encompasses the ability to resist initial damage while maintaining a baseline level of function, the capacity for rapid restoration of full functionality or predefined performance levels, and the minimization of downtime, economic losses, and social disruption. It represents a critical performance objective focused on post-event recovery and continuity, evaluated based on characteristics such as robustness, redundancy, resourcefulness, and rapidity, and is distinct from resilience concepts applied in psychological, social, or ecological domains.

Top Authors

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

MU

Dalhousie University

LT

North-West University

CR

University of Nebraska–Lincoln

CB

International Center for Tropical Agriculture

CF

Stockholm University

Top Institutions

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

Arizona State University

Tempe, United States

Stockholm University

Stockholm, Sweden

The University of Queensland

Brisbane, Australia

North-West University

Potchefstroom, South Africa