jeffhed
Structural
- Mar 23, 2007
- 286
I have a client who wants to replace the roofing material on a very large tour boat. The structure is a 30'-0" x 30'-0" pole building with corrugated steel roof decking. The decking has aged and needs to be replaced but they need engineering to show that the new roof decking and the attachment will be sufficient to resist wind loads. If this is a structure on land that is no problem to determine the design wind loads, etc. However, with this boat being on water, I am not sure where to go to determine what the wind loads should be. The tour boat stays in the bay, it doesn't go out on the open ocean, so for preliminary reasons I looked at what the wind loads would be for a structure and used exposure D to generate some uplift pressures. However, this could be unconservative as this is only checking for actual wind speed not including the speed of the boat, etc. Does anyone know what code or document needs to be used to determine the required design wind pressures? I have done some internet searches and I get hits for floating boat houses, etc., but these are all structures that stay in one place and are not on top of a boat that is moving across the water, potentially into the wind.