IlliniPE
Civil/Environmental
- Jun 19, 2023
- 35
The conversation started in the office about skyscrapers being designed to sway in the wind, some argued to reduce wind pressure or the classic "if it doesn't bend, it will break" argument. That argument seems more of a ductility conversation rather than stating that buildings are designed to sway as in intended to sway. I argue that they are "allowed" to sway, but not necessarily encouraged to. I understand this is largely a semantics issue, but, in my mind, all buildings would be designed to be rigid so long as they resist the loads and cost not being a factor. I was curious of everyone else's thoughts on this. Are buildings "supposed" to sway, or are they just "allowed" to?