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Knee Braces

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00Z

Structural
Nov 21, 2010
45
I am planning on using knee braces to resist seismic loads on a deck attached to a single family home. (I can't show that the existing walls are adequate to resist the load, heavy snow loads).

I was discussing this with a colleague and he told me a local building department here in California told him knee braces are not allowed under the new code because there is no R-value listed for knee braces. I was planning on using 1.5 for timber frame.

Has anyone else come across this restriction?
 
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Sounds more like a local interpretation of the code. Call up (or better e-mail them so you can get a e-mail for your records back) the building department for your site and ask them if a R of 1.5 would be allowed for a deck with timber knee braces.

Garth Dreger PE - AZ Phoenix area
As EOR's we should take the responsibility to design our structures to support the components we allow in our design per that industry standards.
 
frv - It's SDC D

woodman88 - I probably should send an email, but I didn't want to raise a question they weren't concerned about.

I discussed using a cantilever column with the client and he doesn't want to use steel, or embed a wood post in concrete.
 
Usually a knee brace translates to strong beam-weak column. Cardinal sin for seismic (capacity) design.
Rarely a good idea, but maybe okay with an R=1.
 
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