mzaitz
Structural
- Sep 15, 2005
- 30
All,
This is a variation of all the shelf angle posts in the archive. I have a 3 story building that has precast veneer up to 3 ft or so above the second floor and then brick for 24 ft. The construction for the building is composite steel for the 2 floor and lt ga truss roof. My original thought was to put a shelf angle at the third floor but I am rethinking that. My understanding is that the shelf angles are used due to the expansive nature of the brick when it absorbs moisture. ACI530 allows 30 ft from foundation to the top of the brick at the eave. Has anyone done something like this without the shelf angle? Any other thoughts? I may just put in the shelf angle since ACI 530 clearly mentions the height from the foundation but that means designing the 3rd floor beams for a stricter deflection limit.
MZ
This is a variation of all the shelf angle posts in the archive. I have a 3 story building that has precast veneer up to 3 ft or so above the second floor and then brick for 24 ft. The construction for the building is composite steel for the 2 floor and lt ga truss roof. My original thought was to put a shelf angle at the third floor but I am rethinking that. My understanding is that the shelf angles are used due to the expansive nature of the brick when it absorbs moisture. ACI530 allows 30 ft from foundation to the top of the brick at the eave. Has anyone done something like this without the shelf angle? Any other thoughts? I may just put in the shelf angle since ACI 530 clearly mentions the height from the foundation but that means designing the 3rd floor beams for a stricter deflection limit.
MZ