<span>Tarek Abdoun, a civil engineer, remembers vividly the time in 1992 when a Cairo building he helped to design began to shake.</span> <span>"The first thing I thought was that I had done something wrong and the building was collapsing. Everybody started running out. I didn't want to</span><span> – I wanted to face the consequences," he says.</span> <span>It soon became clear why the building was moving – an earthquake was happening. And Prof Abdoun, then a young field engineer, realised that seismic activity </span><span>had not been factored in to the design of the eight-storey structure. </span><span>The building remained standing while </span><span>others </span><span>did not.</span> <span>That "shake-up" sparked Prof Abdoun's interest and he is now a </span><span>professor at NYU Abu Dhabi and an award-winning expert on how land, infrastructure and buildings react to earthquakes and other extreme events, including bomb blasts.</span> <span>Much of his work offers lessons for the Gulf, especially as many buildings in cities such as Dubai are built on reclaimed land</span><span>. This is more likely to behave in a hazardous way</span><span> during an earthquake.</span> <span>“In the Gulf they have a perception, ‘We’re not really in a seismic zone, we shouldn’t worry about it.’ It might not happen frequently, but it’s a risk – it does exist,” he says.</span> <span>In 2007, </span><span>a 4.6-magnitude earthquake </span><span>hit Ras Al Khaimah</span><span>. </span><span>The UAE often feels tremors from much stronger earthquakes centred on Iran.</span> <span>Prof Abdoun’s main area of interest is soil liquefaction — the process by which solid ground turns into a liquid state during an earthquake.</span> <span>Liquefaction can have terrifying results, causing roads and buildings to collapse and cars and vans to be swallowed up</span><span>.</span> <span>"</span><span>Ninety per cent of the damage that happens to foundations is due to liquefaction," he says.</span> <br/> <span>One of Prof Abdoun's most important pieces of research is </span><span>why liquefaction could take place in one area but not another, even though both sites have similar sandy soils.</span> <strong>_______________</strong> <strong>Read more:</strong> <strong>_______________</strong> <span>The case study was California where in 2010, a 7.2-magnitude earthquake struck </span><span>Imperial Valley </span><span>but failed to cause liquefaction and damage was limited. </span><span>In contrast, a 6.9-magnitude earthquake </span><span>20 years earlier caused liquefaction at the Treasure Island Fire Station site in </span><span>San Francisco.</span> <span>Written with three other scientists, the paper</span><span> found that the Imperial Valley site had endured dozens of earthquakes in the century or so since </span><span>sandy soils there had been deposited. </span><span>The San Francisco site had experienced </span><span>a couple of quakes since </span><span>the area's sandy soils were </span><span>left there in the 1930s.</span> <span>The work offered an important new element to consider – seismic history. </span><span>This is of much more than academic interest</span><span> because such insights can be </span><span>used in building design.</span><span> </span> <span>Prof Abdoun, who splits his time between the Centre for Earthquake Engineering Simulation in upstate New York and NYU Abu Dhabi, said: “On the surface [two areas] may look the same, but they’re very, very different based on their character. This has a big impact on the performance.”</span> <span>When there is uncertainty about the potential risk of damage</span><span>, designers will often be more conservative and </span><span>include expensive measures to ensure that a building is highly resistant to earthquakes. These extra costs may be unnecessary.</span> <span>In 2013, Dubai </span><span>said buildings of 10 floors or more would be built to <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/new-earthquake-code-for-dubai-s-tall-buildings-1.260158">withstand </a></span><span><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/new-earthquake-code-for-dubai-s-tall-buildings-1.260158">earthquakes of up to a magnitude of 5.9</a> on the Richter scale. </span> <span>The decision came after the </span><span>UAE felt tremors</span><span> from a <a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/no-need-to-fear-uae-earthquake-says-expert-1.395158">7.8-magnitude </a></span><span><a href="https://www.thenational.ae/uae/no-need-to-fear-uae-earthquake-says-expert-1.395158">earthquake</a> near the Iran-Pakistan border.</span> <span>Experts warned </span><span>the building code would delay projects for months and raise </span><span>costs by as much as 10 per cent.</span> <span>“If you can assess it properly, you might find you don’t need to be extra expensive. You can save a lot of money,” said Prof Abdoun.</span> <span>He said that in the Gulf region "a lot of questions remain" to be answered about how buildings and infrastructure will </span><span>endure in the event of a more serious seismic event</span><span>.</span> <span>“I see some limited work about high-rise buildings, [but] there’s a lot of real estate that’s not high-rise on reclaimed land – a lot of villa homes on reclaimed land and sandy soils, and not much analysis has been done.”</span> <span>This could change, not least because Prof Abdoun is setting up a centre at NYU Abu Dhabi </span><span>which will analyse natural and man-made hazards</span><span>, from earthquakes to terrorist attacks</span> <span>. </span> <span>More than a quarter of a century on from those frightening events in Cairo, Prof Abdoun is still </span><span>putting buildings and neighbourhoods to the test in the most extreme </span><span>circumstances.</span>