mechemi
Mechanical
- Jul 18, 2014
- 12
First, I'm a mechanical engineering student, so I'm not familiar with the US building codes pertaining to this issue. This is also not coursework, but curiosity.
I have encountered a staircase in an industrial setting that is anchored at one end to diamondplate only. One side of the staircase end rests directly on diamondplate (is welded), several inches from the nearest beam connection. The other side of the same staircase end rests on air, next to diamondplate, with a 3" weld between them that would be subjected to shearing through the weld thickness. There are flanges on the diamondplate but no beam supporting it at the staircase.
My gut feeling is that a metal staircase should be connected beam-to-beam at both ends, and that diamondplate should not be used as a primary structural support. However, I don't know where to look to verify this. I found guidelines on the construction of the actual staircase but not regulations on how it would be attached.
Can someone direct me to the appropriate resource, or give me some guidance backed by more experience than I have?
I have encountered a staircase in an industrial setting that is anchored at one end to diamondplate only. One side of the staircase end rests directly on diamondplate (is welded), several inches from the nearest beam connection. The other side of the same staircase end rests on air, next to diamondplate, with a 3" weld between them that would be subjected to shearing through the weld thickness. There are flanges on the diamondplate but no beam supporting it at the staircase.
My gut feeling is that a metal staircase should be connected beam-to-beam at both ends, and that diamondplate should not be used as a primary structural support. However, I don't know where to look to verify this. I found guidelines on the construction of the actual staircase but not regulations on how it would be attached.
Can someone direct me to the appropriate resource, or give me some guidance backed by more experience than I have?