Machine learning application to disaster damage repair cost modelling of residential buildings

Date published

2025

Free to read from

2025-01-09

Supervisor/s

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

Department

Course name

Type

Article

ISSN

0144-6193

Format

Citation

Wanigarathna N, Xie Y, Henjewele C, et al., (2024) Machine learning application to disaster damage repair cost modelling of residential buildings. Construction Management and Economics, Available online 8 December 2024

Abstract

Restoring residential buildings following earthquake damage requires a significant level of resources. Being able to predict these resource requirements in advance and accurately improves the effectiveness of disaster preparedness and subsequent recovery activities. This research explored how the latest ML algorithms could be used for antecedent earthquake loss modelling. A cost database for repairing residential buildings damaged by the Emilia Romagna earthquake in Italy was analysed using six state-of-the-art ML models to explore their ability to predict repair cost rates(cost per floor area) for a domestic building damaged by earthquakes. A Gradient Boost Regression model outperformed five other models in predicting earthquake damage repair cost rate. The performance of this model was significantly accurate and covers about 76% of the cases. A further SHAP analysis revealed that operational level, damage level and non-housing area of the buildings as top 3 important features when predicting the resultant damage repair cost rate. Overall this research advanced antecedent earthquake loss modelling approaches to increase the accuracy of estimates by incorporating more variables than the widely used damage level based simple methodology.

Description

Data used for this research is publicly available in the following portal. https://openricostruzione.regione.emilia-romagna.it/ricostruzione-privata

Software Description

Software Language

Github

Keywords

Earthquake, cost modelling, machine learning, damage repair costs, disaster preparedness, 4005 Civil Engineering, 40 Engineering, 33 Built Environment and Design, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence, Building & Construction, 33 Built environment and design, 38 Economics, 40 Engineering

DOI

Rights

Attribution 4.0 International

Funder/s

European Commission
This work was supported by the European Union’s Horizon 2020 under Grant No 700748

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