A case history is presented here as a contribution to the panel discussion on the impediments to use advanced constitutive and numerical models in geotechnical practice. The problem concerns the evaluation of the effects induced in an existing building by a fault that could develop underneath it during a seismic event. The spreading of the fault and the consequent effects on the building are studied in static conditions through a series of elastic-plastic finite element analyses that account for the reduction of the shear strength and stiffness characteristics of the faulting zone with increasing irreversible strains. Even though the calculations require only “standard”, i.e. peak and residual, material parameters it is shown that these pro...