SteelPE
Structural
- Mar 9, 2006
- 2,759
Somewhat click bait.
I sometimes design foundations for metal buildings. Most of the time I am working with the contractor/erector who is buying the building from a manufacturer. Routinely I find code violations in the loading criteria being used by the metal building manufacturer. Most of the time the local jurisdiction has some overriding load value that goes above and beyond typical IBC/ASCE 7. Most commonly this value is snow load.
Recently I began looking at an incredibly small metal building foundation (only 900+/ square feet). I was given sealed construction drawings from the metal building manufacturer. These sealed drawing have wrong wind speeds (too high), wrong live loads (too high) and wrong snow loads (too low). I know the contractor is sometimes responsible for giving this information to the metal building manufacturer, but it seems like the DGAF about verifying if it’s correct or not. Now we have sealed drawings with the wrong loading criteria. Seems like this is a violation of the standard of care required by engineers who apply their seal to the drawings (You can verify these numbers in under 5 minutes).
In their defense, they do put a statement on the drawings saying “The Project Engineer of Record (not the manufacturer” is responsible for verifying that the building code and design loads meet any and all applicable local requirements.”…. but what they are doing just appears to be very wrong.
I see this over and over and over again. I understand mistakes are made from time to time, but this is par for the course with metal building design.
How can you apply a seal to a building that doesn’t meet code requirements?
I sometimes design foundations for metal buildings. Most of the time I am working with the contractor/erector who is buying the building from a manufacturer. Routinely I find code violations in the loading criteria being used by the metal building manufacturer. Most of the time the local jurisdiction has some overriding load value that goes above and beyond typical IBC/ASCE 7. Most commonly this value is snow load.
Recently I began looking at an incredibly small metal building foundation (only 900+/ square feet). I was given sealed construction drawings from the metal building manufacturer. These sealed drawing have wrong wind speeds (too high), wrong live loads (too high) and wrong snow loads (too low). I know the contractor is sometimes responsible for giving this information to the metal building manufacturer, but it seems like the DGAF about verifying if it’s correct or not. Now we have sealed drawings with the wrong loading criteria. Seems like this is a violation of the standard of care required by engineers who apply their seal to the drawings (You can verify these numbers in under 5 minutes).
In their defense, they do put a statement on the drawings saying “The Project Engineer of Record (not the manufacturer” is responsible for verifying that the building code and design loads meet any and all applicable local requirements.”…. but what they are doing just appears to be very wrong.
I see this over and over and over again. I understand mistakes are made from time to time, but this is par for the course with metal building design.
How can you apply a seal to a building that doesn’t meet code requirements?