Cruezr
Structural
- Oct 21, 2015
- 16
I have a situation where two houses are located on opposite sides of a gully.
The gully is 20m wide at the bottom, is approx 500m wide at the "top" and has a rise of about 25m (so a big flattish V-shape).
Most winds codes (I presume) consider topographic changes starting from the bottom of the hill/escarpment and going up, assuming unimpeded wind load to the bottom of the hill. But what happens in the case of a gully that slopes into the base of the hill then back up the other side ?
Is there any consideration given to the wind having to get down into the gully first then back up the other side, or does the wind skip across the gully and hence reduce the topographical effect ?
As a comparison, what happens when the gully is more like a ravine say only 100m wide and quite deep...common sense suggests there is little wind in the bottom of the ravine and the wind skips across the top, thus effectively nullifying the topographical effect?
Interested to hear members thoughts.
The gully is 20m wide at the bottom, is approx 500m wide at the "top" and has a rise of about 25m (so a big flattish V-shape).
Most winds codes (I presume) consider topographic changes starting from the bottom of the hill/escarpment and going up, assuming unimpeded wind load to the bottom of the hill. But what happens in the case of a gully that slopes into the base of the hill then back up the other side ?
Is there any consideration given to the wind having to get down into the gully first then back up the other side, or does the wind skip across the gully and hence reduce the topographical effect ?
As a comparison, what happens when the gully is more like a ravine say only 100m wide and quite deep...common sense suggests there is little wind in the bottom of the ravine and the wind skips across the top, thus effectively nullifying the topographical effect?
Interested to hear members thoughts.