@ARTICLE{Goliger_A._Comparative_2013, author={Goliger, A. and Żuranski, J. and Giżejowski, M. and Gaczek, M. and Retief, J. and Kruger, A. and Dunaiski, P. and Fiszer, S. and Ćwik, M.}, number={No 1}, journal={Archives of Civil Engineering}, pages={51-95}, howpublished={online}, year={2013}, publisher={WARSAW UNIVERSITY OF TECHNOLOGY FACULTY OF CIVIL ENGINEERING and COMMITTEE FOR CIVIL ENGINEERING POLISH ACADEMY OF SCIENCES}, abstract={Wind constitutes one of the major environmental factors affecting the design and performance of built environment. Each country has its unique climatic wind conditions, and the way in which these are considered and implemented in the structural design, is important. An implementation or adoption of any new engineering design stipulations introduces a formidable challenge to the developers of the standards and the design profession. This has been experienced in some of the countries (e.g. the UK, Australia and the USA), where processes of modernising the outdated codifi cation took place in the past. Although both Poland and South Africa are currently at the early implementation stage of the new wind loading design stipulations, there is a major difference between the circumstances of the two countries. Poland, as an EU member state, has a compulsory obligation to adopt the new uniform standarisation requirements, within a stipulated time-frame. The South African code developers, after a thorough investigation process which will be highlighted in the paper, decided voluntarily to adopt the Eurocode as the primary model document.}, type={Artykuły / Articles}, title={Comparative Study Between Poland and South Africa Wind Climates, the Related Damage and Implications of Adopting the Eurocode for Wind Action on Buildings}, URL={http://journals.pan.pl/Content/83858/mainfile.pdf}, keywords={wind climate, wind damage, wind loading, structural design standards}, }