dcStrucEng
Structural
- Feb 26, 2009
- 45
I work mainly on concrete and steel commercial office building design and haven't had too much experience with residential single family homes, but how hard could it be, right 
So, I was asked by a friend to review some preliminary architectural drawings that he is planning on using (eventually) for his home addition/remodeling. Currently in the garage there is a existing steel pipe column supporting a two-span steel beam, 12'-2" +/- each span. The far ends are supported by exterior CMU bearing walls (mostly above grade). The steel beam supports the existing 2x10 floor joists for the kitchen.
My friend (and his architect) want to remove the pipe column and steel beam and replace with a stronger beam to span 24'-4", thereby having a column-free garage. Obviously, there will be temporary shoring issues to deal with, but that aside my question is this: if headroom is not an issue, is there much of a cost difference in going with a larger steel beam vs. an engineered wood product (glulam, LVL, I-joist, etc.)?
How does the decision of beam material effect the pocketing of the beam into the existing exterior CMU wall? By this I mean, do I need to recommend dampproofing/waterproofing around the ends of the beam or anything else to prevent deterioration?
Any advice would be appreciated.
So, I was asked by a friend to review some preliminary architectural drawings that he is planning on using (eventually) for his home addition/remodeling. Currently in the garage there is a existing steel pipe column supporting a two-span steel beam, 12'-2" +/- each span. The far ends are supported by exterior CMU bearing walls (mostly above grade). The steel beam supports the existing 2x10 floor joists for the kitchen.
My friend (and his architect) want to remove the pipe column and steel beam and replace with a stronger beam to span 24'-4", thereby having a column-free garage. Obviously, there will be temporary shoring issues to deal with, but that aside my question is this: if headroom is not an issue, is there much of a cost difference in going with a larger steel beam vs. an engineered wood product (glulam, LVL, I-joist, etc.)?
How does the decision of beam material effect the pocketing of the beam into the existing exterior CMU wall? By this I mean, do I need to recommend dampproofing/waterproofing around the ends of the beam or anything else to prevent deterioration?
Any advice would be appreciated.