kostast88
Structural
- Jul 22, 2013
- 108
I attended a building materials expo the other day and saw infill panel for buildings made of polysterene (EPS). I was intrigued and at the same time not convinced about it. The vendor argued it's fireproof, earthquake-proof and all sorts of things. For reference it looks something like that:
The main advantages to me are low weight, low material cost & insulation.
I'm very suspicious of the product because under an earthquake, the steel frame would do fine. But I think the differential displacements between steel (ductile) and EPS (brittle) would probably damage the panel, resulting to an unhappy customer and potential claims. That's all other factors aside like fireproofing, waterproofing, fixings, special installation cost, etc.
To those of you who design/build residential steel frame buildings: What type of infill panels do you usually choose? (with Seismic considerations)
In the UK most of what I had seen were:
-Timber stud wall (OK)
-Cold Formed steel studwork (expensive)
-Masonry infill (light blockwork or even brickwork) (heavy)
-Precast panel (super rare)
No earthquakes in the UK, so I'm interested in hearing opinions from high seismicity zones (California, etc).
The main advantages to me are low weight, low material cost & insulation.
I'm very suspicious of the product because under an earthquake, the steel frame would do fine. But I think the differential displacements between steel (ductile) and EPS (brittle) would probably damage the panel, resulting to an unhappy customer and potential claims. That's all other factors aside like fireproofing, waterproofing, fixings, special installation cost, etc.
To those of you who design/build residential steel frame buildings: What type of infill panels do you usually choose? (with Seismic considerations)
In the UK most of what I had seen were:
-Timber stud wall (OK)
-Cold Formed steel studwork (expensive)
-Masonry infill (light blockwork or even brickwork) (heavy)
-Precast panel (super rare)
No earthquakes in the UK, so I'm interested in hearing opinions from high seismicity zones (California, etc).