TY - JOUR
T1 - Insights into resilient underground spaces
T2 - lessons from the Gaza tunnel network
AU - Mitelman, Amichai
AU - Elmo, Davide
AU - Giat, Yahel
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Modern societies depend on critical infrastructure for resilience against attacks and hazardous events, with underground spaces offering defensive advantages. This paper provides a system-level analysis of the Gaza Tunnel Network (GTN), highlighting its resilience under severe attacks. We discuss the engineering evolution of this underground system, which consists of shafts, tunnels, rooms, and large caverns. Key aspects of the GTN’s durability, versatility, redundancy, and recoverability are examined, with implications for contemporary design policies for planning underground spaces for both peacetime and defense functions. The resilience of the GTN demonstrates that underground structures may withstand threats that are conventionally assumed to cause failure. Recognising this may justify reducing design conservatism, thereby enabling the construction of larger public shelters within the same resource constraints.
AB - Modern societies depend on critical infrastructure for resilience against attacks and hazardous events, with underground spaces offering defensive advantages. This paper provides a system-level analysis of the Gaza Tunnel Network (GTN), highlighting its resilience under severe attacks. We discuss the engineering evolution of this underground system, which consists of shafts, tunnels, rooms, and large caverns. Key aspects of the GTN’s durability, versatility, redundancy, and recoverability are examined, with implications for contemporary design policies for planning underground spaces for both peacetime and defense functions. The resilience of the GTN demonstrates that underground structures may withstand threats that are conventionally assumed to cause failure. Recognising this may justify reducing design conservatism, thereby enabling the construction of larger public shelters within the same resource constraints.
KW - Gaza tunnel network
KW - Resilience
KW - shelter
KW - underground space
KW - warfare tunnels
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105012375094
U2 - 10.1080/10286608.2025.2539766
DO - 10.1080/10286608.2025.2539766
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AN - SCOPUS:105012375094
SN - 1028-6608
JO - Civil Engineering and Environmental Systems
JF - Civil Engineering and Environmental Systems
ER -