trou33
Structural
- Jul 11, 2019
- 6
Does anyone have a design approach for a reduction to the MWFRS wind pressure if a cladding is used with a given percent openness that involves more than just reducing the pressure based on the percent open?
Here is the situation: We're designing a facility to be hardened for an extreme wind event (165mph wind speed, exposure C, +/-0.55). A large portion of this facility has rooftop equipment (that cannot be placed inside) that is to be protected from debris in the design event. Protection from rain or other common elements is not necessary - only things like large hail and other flying debris. To provide this we're designing trusses to span over this equipment with intermediate framing as a canopy type structure and using press-locked bar grating for protection.
The bar grating itself and the connections to the framing is selected using C&C loading, which from ASCE 7-10 30.1.5 does not permit a reduction to be used for air-permeable cladding unless test data or literature is provided. However, a reduction to the MWFRS pressure on the structure is what I'm curious about. The design wind criteria is resulting in significant pressures (specifically roof uplift) that can certainly be designed for, but if I can reduce these at all, there would be a cost savings.
Recent studies on the matter would also be appreciated.
Thank you.
Make no little plans.
Here is the situation: We're designing a facility to be hardened for an extreme wind event (165mph wind speed, exposure C, +/-0.55). A large portion of this facility has rooftop equipment (that cannot be placed inside) that is to be protected from debris in the design event. Protection from rain or other common elements is not necessary - only things like large hail and other flying debris. To provide this we're designing trusses to span over this equipment with intermediate framing as a canopy type structure and using press-locked bar grating for protection.
The bar grating itself and the connections to the framing is selected using C&C loading, which from ASCE 7-10 30.1.5 does not permit a reduction to be used for air-permeable cladding unless test data or literature is provided. However, a reduction to the MWFRS pressure on the structure is what I'm curious about. The design wind criteria is resulting in significant pressures (specifically roof uplift) that can certainly be designed for, but if I can reduce these at all, there would be a cost savings.
Recent studies on the matter would also be appreciated.
Thank you.
Make no little plans.