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Structural Health Monitoring
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Article

Monitoring the mechanical behaviour of the weather vane-sculpture mounted atop Seville Cathedral’s Giralda Tower

M. Solís*, A Romero, and P Galvin

Universidad de Sevilla

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: msolis{at}us.es.


   Abstract

This article presents the application of monitoring and detection of structural damage techniques to a historic monument. Seville cathedral’s famous bell tower ‘La Giralda’ is 96 m tall and is crowned with a large 16th century sculpture known as ‘Giraldillo’. The sculpture is supported with an internal bar structure, which is fitted over the axis about which it rotates according to the wind direction, allowing it to function as a weathervane. Between 1999 and 2005 the Giraldillo was demounted and underwent an intensive restoration process, which included mechanical and structural repair work. As the sculpture is only accessible by means of complex and costly scaffolding systems, an instrumentation system consisting of different types of sensors was installed to study the assembly’s mechanical response, its functioning as a weathervane and its state of conservation while it was being remounted atop the Giralda Tower. Different damage detection techniques aimed at detecting possible deterioration in the Giraldillo’s support structure were employed as well. This article presents results obtained in 2 years of system operation, showing how structural heath monitoring techniques can be applied to historical monuments.

First published on June 30, 2009
Structural Health Monitoring 2009, doi:10.1177/1475921709340974


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