Meis
Civil/Environmental
- May 23, 2009
- 1
I was asked at a function a few years ago by a man who was a big gun the wood industry, rather desperately, "why do so many people shy away from wooden structures?"
I answered "Because sometimes understanding, and I mean REALLY understanding, the structural behaviors of wood is somewhat of a dark art"
Many around me agreed.
Anyway my question: I have heard of in the US people who buy old telegraph poles, and cut them up into usable members to build "post barns"
It got me thinking about the structural integrity of telegraph poles used as columns at their full ~12m height.
If you pushed a pole to its extreme, or even aided it with some steel bracing and good solid footings, what kinds of loads do you think a telegraph pole could take? I'm thinking (possibly incorrectly) that telegraph poles might be a plausible substitute for comparably sized steel columns which may be prone to buckling anyway. Maybe even for some reinforced concrete columns? Maybe even married with steel in some way?
They're treated to be weather proof, quite sturdy; definitely recycling these poles is a great environmental alternative.
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FOR EXAMPLE: I recently saw a very large residential building that had roughly a 3m cantilevered balcony, 3 storey’s above ground, sticking out of a reinforced concrete block work structure, there were 2 giant mothers of UCs on each corner of the balcony taking the load to the ground... or maybe they were there for aesthetic purposes (I don't know how much of the load they were taking), they were very close to the footpath, and I thought wow, think they could have been telegraph poles instead?? Would have been an interesting play with the street treatment.
________________________________________
Anyone, who has an opinion, what do you think?? How would you use them, how would you treat them to make this a plausible environmentally friendly solution?
Or am I nuts...?
It's just a thought.
I answered "Because sometimes understanding, and I mean REALLY understanding, the structural behaviors of wood is somewhat of a dark art"
Many around me agreed.
Anyway my question: I have heard of in the US people who buy old telegraph poles, and cut them up into usable members to build "post barns"
It got me thinking about the structural integrity of telegraph poles used as columns at their full ~12m height.
If you pushed a pole to its extreme, or even aided it with some steel bracing and good solid footings, what kinds of loads do you think a telegraph pole could take? I'm thinking (possibly incorrectly) that telegraph poles might be a plausible substitute for comparably sized steel columns which may be prone to buckling anyway. Maybe even for some reinforced concrete columns? Maybe even married with steel in some way?
They're treated to be weather proof, quite sturdy; definitely recycling these poles is a great environmental alternative.
________________________________________
FOR EXAMPLE: I recently saw a very large residential building that had roughly a 3m cantilevered balcony, 3 storey’s above ground, sticking out of a reinforced concrete block work structure, there were 2 giant mothers of UCs on each corner of the balcony taking the load to the ground... or maybe they were there for aesthetic purposes (I don't know how much of the load they were taking), they were very close to the footpath, and I thought wow, think they could have been telegraph poles instead?? Would have been an interesting play with the street treatment.
________________________________________
Anyone, who has an opinion, what do you think?? How would you use them, how would you treat them to make this a plausible environmentally friendly solution?
Or am I nuts...?
It's just a thought.