Labs763
Structural
- Oct 20, 2017
- 29
Hello all,
I am curious how others are designing residential wood framed chimneys with brick veneer. I designed a new house, and the homeowner was previously going to install a freestanding CMU or prefab Isokern chimney. This was to be an exterior chimney outside of the back porch framing. During construction they have discovered they cannot afford it and want to switch to wood framed that is laterally supported by the roof structure. They also want to increase the size and cantilever height (11ft above roof line). My question is how engineers generally design the cantilever frame? This is in a high wind (145 mph) and high seismic zone.
I am probably overconservative on my design, but I have always sized the chimney studs to cantilever without the help of wall sheathing. I do not recall dealing with a chimney cantilever this tall before though. I can get two full height stud packs on the back side of the chimney, but everything else is discontinuous. Even with PSL or LVL stud packs, cantilever studs do not work for deflection. The walls are not wide enough to meet min. shearwall requirements, but it is obviously a fully sheathed box that offers a lot of stiffness. Is there anyone here that does this regularly with no issues? I would prefer switching to a steel frame for this, but want to gauge if that is out of line/overly conservative.
I am curious how others are designing residential wood framed chimneys with brick veneer. I designed a new house, and the homeowner was previously going to install a freestanding CMU or prefab Isokern chimney. This was to be an exterior chimney outside of the back porch framing. During construction they have discovered they cannot afford it and want to switch to wood framed that is laterally supported by the roof structure. They also want to increase the size and cantilever height (11ft above roof line). My question is how engineers generally design the cantilever frame? This is in a high wind (145 mph) and high seismic zone.
I am probably overconservative on my design, but I have always sized the chimney studs to cantilever without the help of wall sheathing. I do not recall dealing with a chimney cantilever this tall before though. I can get two full height stud packs on the back side of the chimney, but everything else is discontinuous. Even with PSL or LVL stud packs, cantilever studs do not work for deflection. The walls are not wide enough to meet min. shearwall requirements, but it is obviously a fully sheathed box that offers a lot of stiffness. Is there anyone here that does this regularly with no issues? I would prefer switching to a steel frame for this, but want to gauge if that is out of line/overly conservative.
