381 likes | 857 Views
Class 4 Applying Loads to Buildings. Loads to study. Dead loads Live loads Wind loads Flood loads Seismic loads Snow loads Rain loads Extraordinary loads Tributary area concept. Tributary area concept. Area to which the load is applied
E N D
Loads to study • Dead loads • Live loads • Wind loads • Flood loads • Seismic loads • Snow loads • Rain loads • Extraordinary loads • Tributary area concept Building Design – Fall 2007
Tributary area concept • Area to which the load is applied • Done progressively through building from top to bottom • Required to size specific members • Loads collected until soil support is determined Building Design – Fall 2007
Examples Building Design – Fall 2007
Our First Analysis – Overall Building Stability • Uplift • Sliding • Overturning • We do this to make sure the overall building will be stable before we concern ourselves with the details Building Design – Fall 2007
Uplift • Vertical load path • Does weight of building and elements exceed uplift force (primarily wind)? • Not exceeding does not suggest failure – it suggests that specific connections must be made to hold the element and/or building in place Building Design – Fall 2007
Uplift design process • Dead load(0.6) ≥ Σ uplift forces (vertical) (ASD load combination for wind) • Calculate vertical component of wind since wind is applied normal to the surface Building Design – Fall 2007
Example building Building Design – Fall 2007
Example Building Design – Fall 2007
Need to look at • building/foundation connection • building with foundation attached • Can not take full value of weight per ASCE 7 (see Chap 2) Building Design – Fall 2007
Sliding • Weight of building and friction create the resistance to sliding • Again, can only use 0.6 x dead load (for wind) • Friction occurs between the building and the foundation or the entire building and the soil • Must determine the frictional resistance factor Φ • Frictional resistance = ((tan Φ x N) + passive soil resistance)) Building Design – Fall 2007
Example Building Design – Fall 2007
Again, must take a look at: • Building to foundation connection • Building with foundation attached at the foundation/soil interface Building Design – Fall 2007
Overturning • Apply overturning moments about a pivot point • Resisting moment can only use 0.6 x dead load (for wind) • Overturning forces must be split into horizontal and vertical components and multiplied by appropriate moment arm Building Design – Fall 2007
Example Building Design – Fall 2007
Most likely failure mode is connection of building to foundation • Not likely the entire foundation will overturn Building Design – Fall 2007
Worked example • Work the CCM problem with crawlspace foundation Building Design – Fall 2007
Dead loads • ASCE 7 – Chapter 3 • Commentary Table C3-1 • Must determine building weight 1 of 2 ways • Individual components unit weight x total number of units in building summed or • System unit weight x area of systems summed Building Design – Fall 2007
Dead weight • Review the methods by using the weights from Chap 3 ASCE 7 Building Design – Fall 2007
Examples of material weights Building Design – Fall 2007
Live loads • ASCE Chapter 4 and Table 4-1 • Concentrated loads • Loads on handrails, etc • Live load reduction • Common live loads • MINIMUMS! • Read Chapter C4 in ASCE 7 Building Design – Fall 2007
Table from IBC & Chap 4 ASCE 7 Building Design – Fall 2007
Building code min. loads • Residential – • 1st floor – 40 psf • Bedrooms – 30 psf • Balconies/decks – 60 psf Building Design – Fall 2007
Snow loads – Chap 7 ASCE 7 • Flat roof snow load • Sloped roof snow load Building Design – Fall 2007
Definitions • pg – ground snow load from map • ce – exposure factor • ct – thermal factor • cs – slope factor • γ – snow density pcf Building Design – Fall 2007
ASCE 7 pg map Building Design – Fall 2007
Snow design considerations • Cold roof • Curved roof • Warm roof • Unbalanced snow loads • Snow drifts • Sliding snow • Rain on snow • Ponding on flat roofs • Roof deflections Building Design – Fall 2007
Review ASCE 7 cases • Figure 7-2 • Figure 7-3 • Figure 7-9 • Tables 7-1,2,3,4 Building Design – Fall 2007
Rain loads – Chap 8 ASCE 7 • Only applied when rain can be ‘collected’ • Flat roof – most difficult design situation • Very shallow sloped roof when gutters or drains can back up • γ = 62.4 lb/ft3 Building Design – Fall 2007
Homework 3 • Read Chapters 4, 7, 8 ASCE and associated commentary • Homework 3 on web site – due in one week • Due 9/19/07 Building Design – Fall 2007