Fatboycowen
Structural
- Nov 4, 2009
- 15
I have an office building currently being occupied by a hospital as a secondary building (not the main hospital). They want to put Hyperbaric chambers on the 3rd floor (moving them from the ground floor).
The chambers roll on 4 wheels, and weight 2500 lb with patient. The wheels are small (maybe 5" dia, 1" wide) hard rubber casters, so the loading area is small. Each wheel is about 633 lb. Spacing is not a problem.
The building was built in the late 80s, and built as an office building, not hospital. The floor is 9/16" 28ga deck with 2.5" total thickness NW conc, with 6x6 w1.4/1.4 wwf. Bar joists are 2'-6" o.c.
The beams and joist are found to be capable. However, i am having trouble justifying the point load on the slab. I used the SDI's suggested approach for equivalent distribution area for point loads. I am finding that punching shear is no problem, but bending is.
I am curious is my approach is correct. The SDI tables show a load capacity for the concrete slab, of 212 psf. I found the width of beam strip (effective width) to be about 6 inches based on the SDI formula. I am using the equivalent point load to convert the uniform (212 psf) to a midspan point load. I am getting very low numbers.
Am i using the correct approach for bending? Are there any other suggestions? 633 pounds does not seem significant, but the numbers just can't justify it. Any advice?
Thanks in advance.
The chambers roll on 4 wheels, and weight 2500 lb with patient. The wheels are small (maybe 5" dia, 1" wide) hard rubber casters, so the loading area is small. Each wheel is about 633 lb. Spacing is not a problem.
The building was built in the late 80s, and built as an office building, not hospital. The floor is 9/16" 28ga deck with 2.5" total thickness NW conc, with 6x6 w1.4/1.4 wwf. Bar joists are 2'-6" o.c.
The beams and joist are found to be capable. However, i am having trouble justifying the point load on the slab. I used the SDI's suggested approach for equivalent distribution area for point loads. I am finding that punching shear is no problem, but bending is.
I am curious is my approach is correct. The SDI tables show a load capacity for the concrete slab, of 212 psf. I found the width of beam strip (effective width) to be about 6 inches based on the SDI formula. I am using the equivalent point load to convert the uniform (212 psf) to a midspan point load. I am getting very low numbers.
Am i using the correct approach for bending? Are there any other suggestions? 633 pounds does not seem significant, but the numbers just can't justify it. Any advice?
Thanks in advance.