Basis of Structural Design
Basis of Structural Design
Course 5
Structural action:
- Cable structures
- Multi-storey structures
Course notes are available for download at
http://www.ct.upt.ro/users/AurelStratan/
Cable structures
Cables - good resistance in tension, but no strength in
compression
Tent:
a cable structure consisting of a waterproofing membrane
supported by ropes or cables and posts
cables must be maintained in tension by prestressing in order to
avoid large vibrations under wind forces and avoid collapse
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Cables: roof structures
Cables in a cable-supported roof
must be maintained in tension -
easily achieved if the roof is saddle-
shaped
Example: hyperbolic paraboloid,
with curvatures in opposite senses
in directions at right angles
cables hung in direction BD
a second set of cables placed over
them, parallel to direction AC and put in
to tension
cables from the second set press down
on those from the first one, putting them
into tension as well fully-tensioned
network
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Suspension bridges
Suspension bridges: the earliest method of crossing
large gaps
Early bridges realised from a walkway suspended from
hanging ropes of vines
To walk a lighter bridge of this type at a reasonable pace
requires a particular gliding step, as the more normal
walking step will induce travelling waves that can cause
the traveller to pitch (uncomfortably) up and down or
side-to-side.
Suspension bridges
Suspension bridge realised following the simple design
of early bridges:
cables (catenaries)
light deck
hangers suspending the deck on catenaries
Lack of stability in high winds
Very flexible under concentrated loads, as the form of the
cable will adapt to loading form
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Suspension bridges
Capilano Suspension Bridge, Canada
Suspension bridges
Improved behaviour under traffic and wind loads:
stiffening trusses at the level of the deck, that distributes
concentrated loads over greater lengths
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Suspension bridges
The Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge, Japan: 1991 m span
Suspension bridges
Golden Gate Bridge, California, USA: 1280 m span
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Suspension bridges
Brooklyn Bridge, USA (the largest from 1883 until 1903):
486 m span
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Cable-stayed bridges
A cable-stayed bridge consists of one or more piers, with
cables supporting the bridge deck
Basic idea: reduce the span of the beam (deck) several
times compared to the clear span between the piers
Steel cable-stayed bridges are regarded as the most
economical bridge design for spans ranging between 200
and 400 m
Shorter spans: truss or box girder bridges
Larger spans: suspension bridges
Cable-stayed bridges
Reducing the
span of a
beam greatly
improves the
maximum
stress and
deflection
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Cable-stayed bridges: examples
Rio-Antirio bridge in Greece. Longest span: 560 m.
Total length: 2,880 m.
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Multi-storey buildings
Why multi-storey buildings?
large urban population
expensive land
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Multi-storey buildings: masonry
Monadnock building in
Chicago
Built between 1889 and 1891
16 storeys, 60 m high
Tallest masonry building
until today
Walls at the ground floor:
almost 1.80 m thick,
occupying more than one-
fifth of the width of the
building
Wall thickness: rule of
thumb - 0.3m3 of exterior
walls for each square meter
of floor
10
Multi-storey buildings: skeleton frames
Steel skeleton frames
loads carried by a steel frame composed of columns and beams
rigidly connected between them
large clear spaces
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Load-bearing wall construction
In modern load-bearing wall construction, lateral forces
due to wind are resisted by walls aligned in the direction
of the wind
Such walls are much more effective, because they have a
much larger moment resistance
Transverse walls acts as vertical cantilevers against
lateral forces
In modern construction,
load-bearing walls
are from reinforced
concrete
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Multi-storey buildings: gravity and lateral loads
Lateral forces on external cladding are transmitted to the
bearing walls
directly, through external cladding
indirectly, via floors
Floors must be stiff and strong in their plane in order to
allow lateral forces acting on gravity frames to be
transmitted to load-bearing walls
Usually floors are realised from cast in place reinforced
concrete to give a monolithic slab over full plan of the
building
F F
Steel structures:
moment-resisting frames
braced frames
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Multi-storey buildings: types of steel structures
Moment-resisting frames resist lateral
loads through flexural strength of
members
clear spaces, but
large deformations of the structure
large stresses due to bending
Concentrically
V-braced frames
Eccentrically
braced frames
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Multi-storey buildings: steel structural systems
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Multi-storey buildings: steel structural systems
Braced frame with central braced span:
inner columns: large axial stresses due to truss action
outer columns: small axial stresses
Outrigger truss: outer columns
are "involved" into the truss-like
action (axial stresses) through
the outrigger truss
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Multi-storey buildings: steel structural systems
Exterior framed tube:
World Trade Center,
New-York
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Multi-storey buildings: steel structural systems
Exterior framed tube: World Trade Center, New-York
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Multi-storey buildings: steel structural systems
Exterior diagonal tube: giant
truss-like behaviour
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