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Digital tool could help save historic stone buildings

historic stone buildings
A new engineering method could help assess the safety of historic stone buildings (Image: Simon Gurney via Dreamstime.com)

Researchers at the University of Sheffield have developed open-source software that could allow the safety of stone and brick masonry constructions to be assessed using a new engineering technique.

Thrust layout optimisation (TLO) builds on the thrust line method that engineers have used since the late 1600s to assess the safety of masonry buildings and bridges.

The researchers explain in a paper, published by The Royal Society, how TLO is more accurate and reliable than the traditional method developed by Robert Hooke in 1675. It also addresses its limitations, such as ignoring the possibility of failure due to sliding.

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