Loui1
Structural
- Apr 25, 2006
- 102
I'm designing a 33'tall x 180'long glass storefront wall. Mullions every 5' or so. 90mph wind zone. The design/build contractor opted to have the structural engineer design the steel backup support for the curtainwall and have the main steel fabricator provide it. This is instead of the curtainwall manufacturer providing it.
The curtainwall manufacturer is telling me their deflection limit is L/240+0.25".
The architect is limiting me to vertical members every 15' and two lines of horizontals. They're crying me a river that the verticals need to be 10" deep wide flanges and the horizontals 10" deep HSS to achieve the deflection requirements. They claim they've seen much smaller steel on the same exact design. I'm catching flack from my project manager, and I want to see if anyone else has designed anything like this.
They're architects so I take it with a grain of salt, but on the same note sometimes make me wonder.
I've wind loaded the thing per ASCE 7-02 and broke down the velocity pressures based on each height gradient. Roughly a 25psf C&C load.
The curtainwall manufacturer is telling me their deflection limit is L/240+0.25".
The architect is limiting me to vertical members every 15' and two lines of horizontals. They're crying me a river that the verticals need to be 10" deep wide flanges and the horizontals 10" deep HSS to achieve the deflection requirements. They claim they've seen much smaller steel on the same exact design. I'm catching flack from my project manager, and I want to see if anyone else has designed anything like this.
They're architects so I take it with a grain of salt, but on the same note sometimes make me wonder.
I've wind loaded the thing per ASCE 7-02 and broke down the velocity pressures based on each height gradient. Roughly a 25psf C&C load.