Labs763
Structural
- Oct 20, 2017
- 27
Hello all,
I am looking for opinions on how a substantial structural alteration limit (30% of total floor and roof area) applies with multi-story buildings. In my case, I have a two story CMU building - the ground floor is a slab on grade, second floor is wood joists with steel girders supported by the perimeter CMU walls and interior steel columns that terminate below second floor, and the roof is wood trusses. The architect would like create a foyer with no second story ceiling; so cut an opening in the second story to create an open area up to the roof.
For easy calculations, say rectangle building, each floor is 1000 sq ft, so a total of 3000 sq ft. So 30% is 900 sq ft.
1) 900sq ft would let me remove basically the entire second floor without triggering a substantial struct. alteration. (Of course I still have to retrofit the walls since they clear span two floors now, but I don't think that kicks me into substantial) If this building was three floors, I could remove the entire floor. That must be incorrect.
2) If the floor is removed, the interior columns are not doing anything and can be removed. But, do the columns/walls supporting the removed second floor also count as part of the area. So would we then divide that by half (just for arguments sake, I guess it would be by trib area) - 450 sq ft floor area can be removed from the second story?
Thank you for your insight.
I am looking for opinions on how a substantial structural alteration limit (30% of total floor and roof area) applies with multi-story buildings. In my case, I have a two story CMU building - the ground floor is a slab on grade, second floor is wood joists with steel girders supported by the perimeter CMU walls and interior steel columns that terminate below second floor, and the roof is wood trusses. The architect would like create a foyer with no second story ceiling; so cut an opening in the second story to create an open area up to the roof.
For easy calculations, say rectangle building, each floor is 1000 sq ft, so a total of 3000 sq ft. So 30% is 900 sq ft.
1) 900sq ft would let me remove basically the entire second floor without triggering a substantial struct. alteration. (Of course I still have to retrofit the walls since they clear span two floors now, but I don't think that kicks me into substantial) If this building was three floors, I could remove the entire floor. That must be incorrect.
2) If the floor is removed, the interior columns are not doing anything and can be removed. But, do the columns/walls supporting the removed second floor also count as part of the area. So would we then divide that by half (just for arguments sake, I guess it would be by trib area) - 450 sq ft floor area can be removed from the second story?
Thank you for your insight.