theonlynamenottaken
Structural
- Jan 17, 2005
- 228
I've designed several "roof-top deck" structures for 100 year old, brick town-square buildings recently. The structures are stand alone (from the brick building structure), with columns extending down to new foundation. BUT, they usually have very large live/dead load ratios and they have absolutely no wind area. What do you use as your lateral load?
Seismic is not the lateral load I most worry about. It is the group of people "swaying" forces I'm pondering. You know, a bunch of people dancing together - which is a very real possibility for roof-top assembly areas at restaurants (wedding receptions).
What I have been using for lateral load is a percentage of the live load. Of course, this isn't identified in codes or literature anywhere. Using ASCE 7 I can easily determine the seismic response coefficients and base shears based off of structure dead loads, but this doesn't seem to be enough load. Also, I worry about service drifts - i.e., excessive drift just from people shifting their weight from side to side. ASCE provides "people sway" lateral forces for stadium seating/bleachers, but those aren't directly applicable...
Sure, I can set a service drift limit - say H/400, 500, etc. But what load do you use to evaluate that??
Any thoughts???
Seismic is not the lateral load I most worry about. It is the group of people "swaying" forces I'm pondering. You know, a bunch of people dancing together - which is a very real possibility for roof-top assembly areas at restaurants (wedding receptions).
What I have been using for lateral load is a percentage of the live load. Of course, this isn't identified in codes or literature anywhere. Using ASCE 7 I can easily determine the seismic response coefficients and base shears based off of structure dead loads, but this doesn't seem to be enough load. Also, I worry about service drifts - i.e., excessive drift just from people shifting their weight from side to side. ASCE provides "people sway" lateral forces for stadium seating/bleachers, but those aren't directly applicable...
Sure, I can set a service drift limit - say H/400, 500, etc. But what load do you use to evaluate that??
Any thoughts???