TroyD
Structural
- Jan 28, 2011
- 98
(Seismic Category A, Northern Minnesota, Exp. category 'B' assumed). A client needs engineering for this custom lake home (example image) with tall wall great room. Lots of glass, and the peak is approx. 25' tall. Also the roof cantilevers out ~6' at the peak. I have not put pencil to paper but this looks like a challenge to satisfy the shear wall design with LSL framing and OSB sheathing. The 6' wall segments at the ends are probably adequate, and the slender tall wall segments between the windows support glulam beams holding up the cathedral roof, so I have some roof dead load to consider for resisting uplift.
At initial glance, is this something that might warrant a steel moment frame? I am somewhat familiar with Simpson Strong-Wall moment frame products. Or perhaps I should evaluate this wall as FTAO (Force Transfer Around Openings) method with some Simpson coil straps to hold these panels together and distribute the in-plane lateral loads to the end wall segments.
Any advice/input is appreciated!
At initial glance, is this something that might warrant a steel moment frame? I am somewhat familiar with Simpson Strong-Wall moment frame products. Or perhaps I should evaluate this wall as FTAO (Force Transfer Around Openings) method with some Simpson coil straps to hold these panels together and distribute the in-plane lateral loads to the end wall segments.
Any advice/input is appreciated!