AbbieLiel
- Associate Professor
- CIVIL ENVIRONMENTAL AND ARCHITECTURAL ENGINEERING
Abbie is an Associate Professor of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering at the University of Colorado, Boulder. She earned undergraduate degrees in Civil Engineering,and the Woodrow Wilson School of Public Policy, at Princeton University. She started her graduate studies in the United Kingdom on a Marshall Scholarship, where she received a M.Sc. in Civil Engineering and a M.Sc. in Building and Urban Design and Development. Abbie did her Ph.D. at Stanford University, under the guidance of Professor Gregory Deierlein, focusing on collapse risk of older non-ductile concrete frame structures. At CU, Abbie has worked on problems related to seismic safety of concrete buildings, snow loads on structures, earthquake-induced liquefaction and mitigation strategies, induced seismicity, and diversity and inclusion in the structural engineering profession. She has been the recipient of the Shah Family Innovation Prize from the Earthquake Engineering Research Institute, and recently received the College of Engineering’sCharles A. Hutchinson Memorial Teaching Award.
Research Interests
Seismic collapse performance prediction of structures and structural systems
Building code provisions for extreme loads, such as earthquakes or snow
Nonlinear modeling of structures, particularly non-ductile reinforced concrete
Propagation of modeling and design uncertainties in structural performance assessments
Life safety risks and economic losses associated with extreme loading
Earthquake performance of housing and schools internationally
Education
Ph.D., Civil and Environmental Engineering, Stanford University, 2008
M.Sc., Building and Urban Design and Development, University College London, 2004
M.Sc., Civil and Environmental Engineering, University College London, 2003
B.S.E., Civil and Environmental Engineering, Princeton University, 2002
Honors and Awards
Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering Teaching Award, 2013
National Science Foundation CAREER Award, 2012
CU IMPART (Implementation of Multicultural Perspectives and Approaches in Research and Teaching)Faculty Fellowship Award, 2012
Department of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering Young Researcher Award, 2011
Recognized as “Next Generation Hazards and Disaster Researcher,” 2009
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Fellowship, 2006
Stanford Graduate Fellowship, 2004
National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship, 2004
Marshall Scholar, 2002
Recent Publications
Venable, Casie, Javernick-Will, Amy, and Liel, Abbie B. Perceptions of Post-Disaster Housing Safety in Future Typhoons and Earthquakes. Sustainability, 12, 3837. 2020.
Liu, Taojun, Nicolas Luco, andAbbie B. Liel.Increases in Life-Safety Risks from Induced Earthquakes in the Central United States.Earthquake Spectra.In Press.2019.
Valigura, Jakub,Abbie B. Liel, and Petros Sideris.Risk-Based Assessment of Seismic Repair Costs for Reinforced Concrete Bridges, Considering Competing Repair Strategies.Journal of Bridge Engineering. Accepted and In Press. 2019.
Robert E. Chase, Abbie B. Liel, Nicolas Luco, and Bridger W. Baird. Seismic Loss and Damage in Light-frame Wood Buildings from Sequences of Induced Earthquakes. Earthquake Engineering and Structural Dynamics.Accepted.2019.
Paramasivam, Balaji, Shideh Dashti andAbbie B. Liel.Impact of Spatial Variations in Permeability of Liquefiable Deposits on the Seismic Performance of Structures and Effectiveness of Drains.ASCE Journal of Geotechnical and Geoenvironmental Engineering.Accepted and In Press.2019.
Bullock, Zach, Shideh Dashti,Abbie B. Liel, Keith A. Porter, and Zana Karimi.Assessment Supporting the Use of Outcropping Rock, Evolutionary Intensity Measures for Prediction of Liquefaction Consequences on Structures.Earthquake Spectra.Accepted and In Press.2019.