jlleiber
Structural
- Oct 6, 2016
- 18
I am working on a relatively small (14'x14')sunroom style addition where the owner wants a 4-sided, pyramid hip roof with a vaulted ceiling on the interior and no ceiling joists. I was originally going to do the standard pyramid style wood roof framing and detail it to use the wall top plates and fascia boards to resolve the thrust in the corners. However, there is a dual-sided brick fireplace on one wall and the owner has requested that it continue above the roof line, which will interrupt my top plates on this wall.
Is there a way to frame this using conventional lumber? The fire place will be a gas insert so potentially I can have them run a strap or 2 all the way through the brick to connect the top plates. Or do I need to design a rigid kinked wide flange beam to put diagonally across the roof that does not introduce thrust into the walls? If I go the wide flange route, can I get by with just one kinked beams?
I have attached the exterior elevation and a very rough framing plan.
The other thing that might help is the contractor suggested "boxing" out a section on the interior where the roof meets the walls so we can hide all the connections. Think like a vaulted tray ceiling. The contractor also wants to put a "flat" section of ceiling at the peak too so I can hide connections in these spots.
Just looking to brainstorm the cheapest/easiest option to build. Thanks
Is there a way to frame this using conventional lumber? The fire place will be a gas insert so potentially I can have them run a strap or 2 all the way through the brick to connect the top plates. Or do I need to design a rigid kinked wide flange beam to put diagonally across the roof that does not introduce thrust into the walls? If I go the wide flange route, can I get by with just one kinked beams?
I have attached the exterior elevation and a very rough framing plan.
The other thing that might help is the contractor suggested "boxing" out a section on the interior where the roof meets the walls so we can hide all the connections. Think like a vaulted tray ceiling. The contractor also wants to put a "flat" section of ceiling at the peak too so I can hide connections in these spots.
Just looking to brainstorm the cheapest/easiest option to build. Thanks