CTW
Structural
- May 30, 2002
- 312
These reports are weak and offer the county and insurance company no definitive answer to the cause of collapse.
The structural engineering states that the design snow load was 35 psf and that the snow load on the day of collapse was only "23 pounds" (I'm assuming this should be 23 psf). He also states that there have been significantly greater snow accumulations in the past that have not resulted in collapse, thus ruling out excessive loading.
The structural engineer preliminarily concludes that the failure was not a result of an overload condition and defers to the metallurgical analysis to identify the failure and building collapse.
The mechanical and materials engineer then concludes that the cause of failure was the snow event in combination with a pooly designed and manufactured main truss support.
If there have been significantly greater snow accumulations in the past, then why did the roof not fail then in combination with the poor truss support?
Something is not right. The reports are too ambiguous. I'm assuming FORCON was hired to determine the cause of collapse, which they haven't done. But then again, maybe they only provided as much detail as the insurance company allowed them to since they were hired by the insurance company.
It's not going to be a fun trial for FORCON.
The structural engineering states that the design snow load was 35 psf and that the snow load on the day of collapse was only "23 pounds" (I'm assuming this should be 23 psf). He also states that there have been significantly greater snow accumulations in the past that have not resulted in collapse, thus ruling out excessive loading.
The structural engineer preliminarily concludes that the failure was not a result of an overload condition and defers to the metallurgical analysis to identify the failure and building collapse.
The mechanical and materials engineer then concludes that the cause of failure was the snow event in combination with a pooly designed and manufactured main truss support.
If there have been significantly greater snow accumulations in the past, then why did the roof not fail then in combination with the poor truss support?
Something is not right. The reports are too ambiguous. I'm assuming FORCON was hired to determine the cause of collapse, which they haven't done. But then again, maybe they only provided as much detail as the insurance company allowed them to since they were hired by the insurance company.
It's not going to be a fun trial for FORCON.