cruzinbear
Structural
- Dec 19, 2012
- 19
I've been assigned my first solar installation job to be mounted on an existing commercial building. I need to provide adequate framing for the solar panels however the biggest challenge I have on this job is that I do NOT have the original building plans.
What I know is that the building has been constructed in the 1960's. It's a single story industrial structure with a light corrugated steel roof supported by purlins spanning to trusses. The lateral force resisting systems include moment-frames and braced-framed. The solar panels are very light (about 2.7 psf with framing)with framing connecting to existing roof every 48" o/c.
My plan is to conduct a site visit and physically size the purlins and truss systems. Following this, perform structural analysis to determine whether or not the existing roof system can handle the concentrated wind loads (based on the support system of panels 48" o/c and proposed panel layout). Wind load case will most likely govern the design for the connections and direct elements such as the purlins and roof trusses. If additional framing or retrofitting is required I will provide this for the existing roof system.
Does anyone have recommendations regarding this? What conservative assumptions can I make given the existing old construction? Also, should I continue to investigate other structural elements (ex: checking seismic resisting system due to added seismic weight)? Regarding seismic weight, existing roof is probably not more than 10 psf (which I will confirm once at the site) which now will be 12.7 psf (in some areas, about 25% of the entire roof area). However, not having the original plans makes it impossible to know exactly what dead load the engineer of record assumed for the original design.
Any advice or recommendation will be much appreciated. Thank you.
What I know is that the building has been constructed in the 1960's. It's a single story industrial structure with a light corrugated steel roof supported by purlins spanning to trusses. The lateral force resisting systems include moment-frames and braced-framed. The solar panels are very light (about 2.7 psf with framing)with framing connecting to existing roof every 48" o/c.
My plan is to conduct a site visit and physically size the purlins and truss systems. Following this, perform structural analysis to determine whether or not the existing roof system can handle the concentrated wind loads (based on the support system of panels 48" o/c and proposed panel layout). Wind load case will most likely govern the design for the connections and direct elements such as the purlins and roof trusses. If additional framing or retrofitting is required I will provide this for the existing roof system.
Does anyone have recommendations regarding this? What conservative assumptions can I make given the existing old construction? Also, should I continue to investigate other structural elements (ex: checking seismic resisting system due to added seismic weight)? Regarding seismic weight, existing roof is probably not more than 10 psf (which I will confirm once at the site) which now will be 12.7 psf (in some areas, about 25% of the entire roof area). However, not having the original plans makes it impossible to know exactly what dead load the engineer of record assumed for the original design.
Any advice or recommendation will be much appreciated. Thank you.