puszka
Civil/Environmental
- Jul 12, 2022
- 30
Hi everyone,
I have been doing a lot of reading from prominent 20th century engineers (Eduardo Torroja, Nervi, Waclaw Zalewski etc.) and I am interested in learning more about stress trajectories and how to find them in different structural shapes. It is a really cool concept though it is hardly even mentioned in an undergrad, but has been used to in the past to create some amazing works. As I am playing around with Karamba 3D for fun and my own knowledge, I was hoping to learn some more basic theory behind it to improve my intuition. If anyone knows of any good resources/books/texts/entire subjects that are introductory into how forces are transferred through different materials and different shapes, I would love to know more. All I really understand now are the parallel, fan, and lattice networks in walls, beams, and prismatic members and I know there is a lot more to learn.
For example, Nervi designed the Gatti Wool Factory with the ribs aligned to the isostatics of the the maximum and minimum bending moments in the slab (pictured). I'm still not totally sure how to find these without the help of a software which for me is a black box in terms of understanding.
I have been doing a lot of reading from prominent 20th century engineers (Eduardo Torroja, Nervi, Waclaw Zalewski etc.) and I am interested in learning more about stress trajectories and how to find them in different structural shapes. It is a really cool concept though it is hardly even mentioned in an undergrad, but has been used to in the past to create some amazing works. As I am playing around with Karamba 3D for fun and my own knowledge, I was hoping to learn some more basic theory behind it to improve my intuition. If anyone knows of any good resources/books/texts/entire subjects that are introductory into how forces are transferred through different materials and different shapes, I would love to know more. All I really understand now are the parallel, fan, and lattice networks in walls, beams, and prismatic members and I know there is a lot more to learn.
For example, Nervi designed the Gatti Wool Factory with the ribs aligned to the isostatics of the the maximum and minimum bending moments in the slab (pictured). I'm still not totally sure how to find these without the help of a software which for me is a black box in terms of understanding.