EEJaime
Electrical
- Jan 14, 2004
- 536
All,
Just a general question that came to mind as I was reading today of a high rise residential tower that opened in Dubai, where each floor has a 1.5 degree twist from the floor below. this results in a total of 90 degrees of twist top to bottom. Quite a striking structure. It struck me that the connections floor to floor must be quite different from a normal vertical load transfer connection. Is there large lateral components to the loads as these connections get further skewed as the twist increases?
Just a curious non-structural engineer admiring advances in engineering.
Regards,
EEJAIME
Just a general question that came to mind as I was reading today of a high rise residential tower that opened in Dubai, where each floor has a 1.5 degree twist from the floor below. this results in a total of 90 degrees of twist top to bottom. Quite a striking structure. It struck me that the connections floor to floor must be quite different from a normal vertical load transfer connection. Is there large lateral components to the loads as these connections get further skewed as the twist increases?
Just a curious non-structural engineer admiring advances in engineering.
Regards,
EEJAIME