IslandEngineer
Structural
- Jun 6, 2006
- 14
Engineers,
I need to develop the structural requirements for the repair of a 1982 (2) story log house damaged by fire. The house is not a "kit" type log house; it was hand built. The 2nd story is a total loss and will be removed and subsequently rebuilt using standard 2x6 light frame construction. The 1st story, 26' x 32' x 9 ft (to the 2nd floor), has not been damaged except for the local (6 linear ft of charring) sections of the top 2 logs. The charring is approximately 3/8" deep (max)on these logs which is important as these are the continuous top intersecting linkage logs above doors and windows.
The log walls consist of 10-11 12" diam to 6" diam doug fir logs held together with interconnecting coved joinery at the corners and a series of 1/2" diam x 3 ft long staggered rebar driven vertically through the logs at 3-4 places along each wall. There is a minimum of 1 log vertical overlap at each stagger. These rebar are the core of my inquiry. I intend to use them to assist with the transfer of lateral load thru the walls. The foundation is in good condition - concrete footing and stemwall with the sill log attached with 1/2" AB at about 6 ft c/c.
I obtained the ICC 400-2007 Standard on Design & Construction of Log Structures but I can find no guidance except for Sections 403.1 & 404.2.2 & 406 which note the need for load tranfer but not the how.
Please give me your comment, advice and/or recommendation on transfer of lateral (and vertical) load through the above described log system.
Thanks for Your Input.
Island Engineer
I need to develop the structural requirements for the repair of a 1982 (2) story log house damaged by fire. The house is not a "kit" type log house; it was hand built. The 2nd story is a total loss and will be removed and subsequently rebuilt using standard 2x6 light frame construction. The 1st story, 26' x 32' x 9 ft (to the 2nd floor), has not been damaged except for the local (6 linear ft of charring) sections of the top 2 logs. The charring is approximately 3/8" deep (max)on these logs which is important as these are the continuous top intersecting linkage logs above doors and windows.
The log walls consist of 10-11 12" diam to 6" diam doug fir logs held together with interconnecting coved joinery at the corners and a series of 1/2" diam x 3 ft long staggered rebar driven vertically through the logs at 3-4 places along each wall. There is a minimum of 1 log vertical overlap at each stagger. These rebar are the core of my inquiry. I intend to use them to assist with the transfer of lateral load thru the walls. The foundation is in good condition - concrete footing and stemwall with the sill log attached with 1/2" AB at about 6 ft c/c.
I obtained the ICC 400-2007 Standard on Design & Construction of Log Structures but I can find no guidance except for Sections 403.1 & 404.2.2 & 406 which note the need for load tranfer but not the how.
Please give me your comment, advice and/or recommendation on transfer of lateral (and vertical) load through the above described log system.
Thanks for Your Input.
Island Engineer