DaveAtkins
Structural
- Apr 15, 2002
- 2,897
I am working with a client who is wondering what would be involved in creating a "tornado shelter" within a new building. The client thinks the locker rooms within the building could be designed as a tornado shelter.
We originally proposed that the locker room CMU walls be designed as exterior walls per ASCE 7 (even though they are interior walls), and the roof deck above the locker rooms have additional puddle welds, but no other special design be done. But the client wants to know what it will take to really design for a tornado.
I must admit, I have never done this kind of design before. I found an Eng-Tips thread from 2006 which discussed tornado wind speed:
Category F5: Incredible Damage (261- 318 mph)
Do I use this wind speed, and plug it into the ASCE 7 formulas? Seems a bit excessive to me.
DaveAtkins
We originally proposed that the locker room CMU walls be designed as exterior walls per ASCE 7 (even though they are interior walls), and the roof deck above the locker rooms have additional puddle welds, but no other special design be done. But the client wants to know what it will take to really design for a tornado.
I must admit, I have never done this kind of design before. I found an Eng-Tips thread from 2006 which discussed tornado wind speed:
Category F5: Incredible Damage (261- 318 mph)
Do I use this wind speed, and plug it into the ASCE 7 formulas? Seems a bit excessive to me.
DaveAtkins