CBSE
Structural
- Feb 5, 2014
- 309
Have an investigative project. A 2-story wood structure that the owner called and said the second story wall shifted outward from the building. I spent about 2 hours looking at different structural aspects and then decided to look at the trusses a little further after not finding any thing structurally out of order or looking stressed (other than the obvious fact that the wall had rotated outward). What appears to have happened is most likely during the heavy snow we had last year, the bottom chords of these trusses buckled under the weight and pushed the wall out. The owner is just now noticing the movement due to a light fixture cover falling down.
The wall that has rotated outward is leaning about 3/8" in 48", so it's a pretty good sized deflection. The total height of the studs is 10ft. The trusses span 54ft, there is a single rat run down the middle of the trusses that runs nearly perfectly perpendicular. Has anyone seen this type of failure before? Questions:
1) Is it possible to "pull" the trusses back into place?
2) If it's not possible, is the best solution to add bracing to the trusses to keep them from buckling more? Or replace the trusses all together?
3) It doesn't appear that the tenants are in imminent danger at this time because the roof is not loaded, other than dead load, however, it seems if there was a sizable wind event, the suction force on that end of the building could potentially exacerbate the situation. Evacuating the end of the building that has the issue may be in order until it is fixed?
Attached is a section of the trusses.
The wall that has rotated outward is leaning about 3/8" in 48", so it's a pretty good sized deflection. The total height of the studs is 10ft. The trusses span 54ft, there is a single rat run down the middle of the trusses that runs nearly perfectly perpendicular. Has anyone seen this type of failure before? Questions:
1) Is it possible to "pull" the trusses back into place?
2) If it's not possible, is the best solution to add bracing to the trusses to keep them from buckling more? Or replace the trusses all together?
3) It doesn't appear that the tenants are in imminent danger at this time because the roof is not loaded, other than dead load, however, it seems if there was a sizable wind event, the suction force on that end of the building could potentially exacerbate the situation. Evacuating the end of the building that has the issue may be in order until it is fixed?
Attached is a section of the trusses.