davidfi
Structural
- Sep 28, 2005
- 39
I am starting work on a new 3-story office building in Calif with braced frames in one direction and moment frames in the other direction. The floors will be lightweight concrete over metal deck.
Before I get too far in the design, I want to make sure I have a good handle on attaching the metal stud cladding (finished with cement plaster) to the exterior of the building. The metal studs will be balloon framed from the slab up to the roof and clipped to each floor. After reading ASCE 13.5.3 regarding in-plane drift, it sounds like I can:
(a) Keep the metal stud cladding independent of the primary structural steel with the use of drift clips.
OR
(b) Connect the metal stud cladding laterally to the primary structural steel and have the metal stud cladding "go for the ride".
I have the following questions:
1) If I do option (a), can I use the exterior Dens Glass sheathing to resist the in-plane self-weight loads of the metal stud cladding system.
2) If I do option (a), what do you do at the corners where the perpendicular wall is rigidly attached for out-of-plane loads?
3) If I do option (b), I am concerned that the drift of the moment frames will rip the cement plaster cladding apart. Is this a valid concern?
Thanks for any advice!
Before I get too far in the design, I want to make sure I have a good handle on attaching the metal stud cladding (finished with cement plaster) to the exterior of the building. The metal studs will be balloon framed from the slab up to the roof and clipped to each floor. After reading ASCE 13.5.3 regarding in-plane drift, it sounds like I can:
(a) Keep the metal stud cladding independent of the primary structural steel with the use of drift clips.
OR
(b) Connect the metal stud cladding laterally to the primary structural steel and have the metal stud cladding "go for the ride".
I have the following questions:
1) If I do option (a), can I use the exterior Dens Glass sheathing to resist the in-plane self-weight loads of the metal stud cladding system.
2) If I do option (a), what do you do at the corners where the perpendicular wall is rigidly attached for out-of-plane loads?
3) If I do option (b), I am concerned that the drift of the moment frames will rip the cement plaster cladding apart. Is this a valid concern?
Thanks for any advice!