dukeguy
Structural
- Apr 19, 2012
- 4
I'm a structural engineer serving in a role as owner's rep / authority having jurisdiction. One of our facilities is looking at installing new hoist equipment in an existing mechanical room. My conundrum involves a facility manager who wants to install a hoist that could exceed the capacity of the room. They provided calculations for new steel framing beneath the slab to support the hoist equipment, however, the designer only sized beams based on the LL of the mechanical room, *not* the max rating of the hoist.
The facilities manager assures me that the hoist is oversized and they will never need to lift anything that heavy. I feel like the code doesn't give me the luxury of assuming all future facilities managers would know this fact etc etc.
I was going to put my foot down and require the support steel to develop the full rating of the hoist (+ dynamic effects). However, I then started wondering if I'm just pushing the "weak link" out to the surrounding floor slab... would it be a problem if the hoist rating overloaded the adjacent floor slab (i.e. if they roll something heavy that the hoist & hoist support steel can handle into the corner of the room and now there's a slab problem) I know the live load section of IBC/ASCE references designing to the max of either the area load or the specific equipment weights. If I'm introducing a hoist into a mechanical room, is the "equipment weight" now the rating of the hoist, and that room's entire floor needs to be designed accordingly (rather than just the immediate hoist support framing) Or is that interpretation overkill?
Thanks!
The facilities manager assures me that the hoist is oversized and they will never need to lift anything that heavy. I feel like the code doesn't give me the luxury of assuming all future facilities managers would know this fact etc etc.
I was going to put my foot down and require the support steel to develop the full rating of the hoist (+ dynamic effects). However, I then started wondering if I'm just pushing the "weak link" out to the surrounding floor slab... would it be a problem if the hoist rating overloaded the adjacent floor slab (i.e. if they roll something heavy that the hoist & hoist support steel can handle into the corner of the room and now there's a slab problem) I know the live load section of IBC/ASCE references designing to the max of either the area load or the specific equipment weights. If I'm introducing a hoist into a mechanical room, is the "equipment weight" now the rating of the hoist, and that room's entire floor needs to be designed accordingly (rather than just the immediate hoist support framing) Or is that interpretation overkill?
Thanks!