lvbutcher
Structural
- Feb 9, 2020
- 7
I'm nearly ready to build the home I've been planning for decades. It will be an earth home, 35'x110', under 2' of soil with the south face exposed and mainly glass. I've hired a good structural engineer to figure wall thicknesses, footings, rebar, and the structural steel for the front wall. BTW, I'm a retired union Ironworker of 30 years. I've always planned on using pre-cast slabs for the roof, and found a company within 90 miles of the build site that has figured out the specs for what I'll need. The back wall will be 12" thick, 10' high and the front wall will be structural steel square tube columns (6x6x3/8)carrying WF beams from w24x55 to w21x44, depending on the span. (They will all be concealed in the front wall). The pre-cast hollow core slab design calls for (27) 1'x4'x35' hollow core slabs, weighing approx. 13,000# each. The engineer figured this size to hold 2' of soil and various short pedestal walls for skylights in the rear rooms, plus a reasonable amount of live loads, such as a compact tractor for mowing, and also any equipment needed to install the soil (backhoe, skidsteer). There will be some rebar, a 2" concrete topping, EPDM rubber for water proofing, etc. The slabs will be free-span from front to rear walls, set flush with the inside corner of the side walls, so as not to interfere with deflection due to loads.
I'd like to know what it would take to do the same job with bar joists and bridging, with a 4" poured slab on corrugated floor decking (commercial/industrial type galvanized). The total price for the roof slabs I've gotten is about $45k, delivered on site, with openings and frames for the 3 skylights included. Since this is the only company I know of close enough to deliver reasonably, (3 slabs per truck, or 9 truck loads), I'm okay with the price and the company's helpfulness. But just thinking about 175 tons of concrete slabs and another 400 tons of soil above is a little unnerving.
How would I go about finding what size bar joists could carry the decking, 4" of concrete and necessary rebar or mesh and waterproofing, and still carry 200# per sq. ft. of soil? I've set many a building using bar joists and I've studied a few books on them, and researched the subject, but I'm not finding an answer. The trick is, if I switch to bj's, they'll have to have a maximum depth of 2' if I want to keep an 8' ceiling. I'm assuming I would have to forego the free span and run a beam down the center length of the house and garage for a carrier beam with 2 rows of joists, but I'd rather not if I don't have to. So, here's my question- what size bar joists would it take to accomplish this feat? Thanks for any and all replies. I haven't counted the use of the slabs out yet. I just would like to know what my options are. Lee
"Knowing is not enough, we must apply.
Willing is not enough, we must do."
Goethe
I'd like to know what it would take to do the same job with bar joists and bridging, with a 4" poured slab on corrugated floor decking (commercial/industrial type galvanized). The total price for the roof slabs I've gotten is about $45k, delivered on site, with openings and frames for the 3 skylights included. Since this is the only company I know of close enough to deliver reasonably, (3 slabs per truck, or 9 truck loads), I'm okay with the price and the company's helpfulness. But just thinking about 175 tons of concrete slabs and another 400 tons of soil above is a little unnerving.
How would I go about finding what size bar joists could carry the decking, 4" of concrete and necessary rebar or mesh and waterproofing, and still carry 200# per sq. ft. of soil? I've set many a building using bar joists and I've studied a few books on them, and researched the subject, but I'm not finding an answer. The trick is, if I switch to bj's, they'll have to have a maximum depth of 2' if I want to keep an 8' ceiling. I'm assuming I would have to forego the free span and run a beam down the center length of the house and garage for a carrier beam with 2 rows of joists, but I'd rather not if I don't have to. So, here's my question- what size bar joists would it take to accomplish this feat? Thanks for any and all replies. I haven't counted the use of the slabs out yet. I just would like to know what my options are. Lee
"Knowing is not enough, we must apply.
Willing is not enough, we must do."
Goethe