Everynameistaken
Structural
- Jun 29, 2014
- 68
Hi all,
We are designing a steel building structure for and industrial facility.
The key industrial process requires moving large amounts of water through open troughs. These troughs must be kept out of the direct light without adding rain so we need to provide rain weather shield. Not a full building envelope with insulation.
This is where my specific question comes in.
Typically on a metal building we would design the cladding system with sheet metal girts and purlins and then an exposed fastener metal cladding. The secondary elements would be inside the building envelope and moisture barriers with HVAC to keep the moisture under control. The girts and purlins are usually from galvanize coil bent into either C or Z sections, bolted to the main steel and then the cladding screwed into them.
The challenge with our current situation, is the environment is very moist, there is no HVAC or moisture barriers, and we expect condensation to be significant with quite a bit of water accumulating on the secondary members.
Does anyone have any experience with the durability of traditional galvanized coil secondary elements in a moist environment?
Has anybody specified these elements to be taken for a secondary coating (paint) to be applied?
Are there any other products people have used for this application that have better durability than sheet metal?
Thanks for your thoughts!
We are designing a steel building structure for and industrial facility.
The key industrial process requires moving large amounts of water through open troughs. These troughs must be kept out of the direct light without adding rain so we need to provide rain weather shield. Not a full building envelope with insulation.
This is where my specific question comes in.
Typically on a metal building we would design the cladding system with sheet metal girts and purlins and then an exposed fastener metal cladding. The secondary elements would be inside the building envelope and moisture barriers with HVAC to keep the moisture under control. The girts and purlins are usually from galvanize coil bent into either C or Z sections, bolted to the main steel and then the cladding screwed into them.
The challenge with our current situation, is the environment is very moist, there is no HVAC or moisture barriers, and we expect condensation to be significant with quite a bit of water accumulating on the secondary members.
Does anyone have any experience with the durability of traditional galvanized coil secondary elements in a moist environment?
Has anybody specified these elements to be taken for a secondary coating (paint) to be applied?
Are there any other products people have used for this application that have better durability than sheet metal?
Thanks for your thoughts!