vmirat
Structural
- Apr 4, 2002
- 294
I need a sanity check from you all that work in the private sector. I work for a federal government office as a structural engineer and am responsible to do reviews of designs that have been accomplished by outside architect/engineer firms. Recently, I reviewed a design that had several errors dealing with code requirements. I'll give you two examples so you can see my concerns.
This is a 3000 square foot addition to an existing building. It's 16 feet to top of parapet, 13 feet to roof deck, single story with flat roof (1/4" per foot slope), steel frame structure with shear walls, and metal deck diaphram. One side of the building has six windows with four feet between each window. Total length of building side is 54 feet. The engineer designed the shear wall as Type I without special consideration for load transfer around the windows. He added up the lengths of the wall segments between the windows and used that to determine the aspect ratio for the shear wall (i.e. 16/24). I explained to him that the aspect ratio must be calculated based on the dimensions of the wall segment between the windows, not the total shear area. Although he agreed with me, he said it was not a big deal and that he would revise the calcs by using the strength around the windows. The other mistake was in calculating the roof diaphram shear. He calculated the wind pressure on the wall (211 plf) but mistakenly used that as the unit shear load to figure out the attachment requirements for the deck (i.e. 1.5B22 deck with 5 puddle welds and two #10 tek screws). Instead of 211 plf shear, it is actually 112 plf. Again, he admitted his mistake but said that it wouldn't make any difference in the price of the building because the deck itself doesn't change, so it wasn't a big deal.
I've been accused of being too picky. They said that, in the private sector, building departments don't look that closely at designs, so they're not used to that level of scrutiny. I'm aware that regional building doesn't do the same level of review that I do, but code is code. Are these kinds of mistakes common and just ignored? Am I being to picky here?
This is a 3000 square foot addition to an existing building. It's 16 feet to top of parapet, 13 feet to roof deck, single story with flat roof (1/4" per foot slope), steel frame structure with shear walls, and metal deck diaphram. One side of the building has six windows with four feet between each window. Total length of building side is 54 feet. The engineer designed the shear wall as Type I without special consideration for load transfer around the windows. He added up the lengths of the wall segments between the windows and used that to determine the aspect ratio for the shear wall (i.e. 16/24). I explained to him that the aspect ratio must be calculated based on the dimensions of the wall segment between the windows, not the total shear area. Although he agreed with me, he said it was not a big deal and that he would revise the calcs by using the strength around the windows. The other mistake was in calculating the roof diaphram shear. He calculated the wind pressure on the wall (211 plf) but mistakenly used that as the unit shear load to figure out the attachment requirements for the deck (i.e. 1.5B22 deck with 5 puddle welds and two #10 tek screws). Instead of 211 plf shear, it is actually 112 plf. Again, he admitted his mistake but said that it wouldn't make any difference in the price of the building because the deck itself doesn't change, so it wasn't a big deal.
I've been accused of being too picky. They said that, in the private sector, building departments don't look that closely at designs, so they're not used to that level of scrutiny. I'm aware that regional building doesn't do the same level of review that I do, but code is code. Are these kinds of mistakes common and just ignored? Am I being to picky here?