%0 Journal Article %T Analysis, Design, and Construction of a Base-Isolated Multiple Building Structure %A Stefano Sorace %A Gloria Terenzi %J Advances in Civil Engineering %D 2014 %I Hindawi Publishing Corporation %R 10.1155/2014/585429 %X The analysis and design of a multiple residential building, seismically protected by a base isolation system incorporating double friction pendulum sliders as protective devices, are presented in the paper. The building, situated in the suburban area of Florence, is composed of four independent reinforced concrete framed structures, mutually separated by three thermal expansion joints. The plan is L-shaped, with dimensions of about 75£¿m in the longitudinal direction and about 30£¿m along the longest side of the transversal direction. These characteristics identify the structure as the largest example of a base-isolated ¡°artificial ground¡± ever built in Italy. The base isolation solution guarantees lower costs, a much greater performance, and a finer architectural look, as compared to a conventional fixed-base antiseismic design. The characteristics of the building and the isolators, the mechanical properties and the experimental characterization campaign and preliminary sizing carried out on the latter, and the nonlinear time-history design and performance assessment analyses developed on the base isolated building are reported in this paper, along with details about the installation of the isolators and the plants and highlights of the construction works. 1. Introduction Base isolation is nowadays a well-established and viable antiseismic design strategy for new buildings and bridges, as well as for the retrofit of existing ones, with several thousand applications in over 30 earthquake-prone countries worldwide. The use of this technology, originally restricted to massive and stiff structures, has been progressively extended in the past decade to include slender and high-rise buildings, as well as groups of structures built on a single platform (also labelled as ¡°artificial ground¡±) [1]. This is a consequence of the increase in the fundamental vibration period targeted in base-isolated conditions, following the incorporation of the latest generation of isolators, characterized by very low translational stiffness. The period, normally fixed at 2¨C2.5£¿s in early designs, was subsequently raised to 3¨C3.5£¿s, for standard buildings, and to over 4£¿s, for special structures. This allowed extending the benefits of seismic isolation to wider classes of applications, that is, the new structural configurations above and other notably demanding conditions, and, namely, significant geometrical irregularities in plan and/or elevation [2]; possible effects of near-fault earthquake components in the construction site [3¨C6]; a trend towards marked reductions in width of %U http://www.hindawi.com/journals/ace/2014/585429/