ampersand
Structural
- Sep 2, 2005
- 30
Hello, all.
I am engineering a steel tube entry frame inside of an existing building. Anchors to an existing raised slab, which needs to be checked (separate issue). Consists of two moment frames, set about 5 feet apart, each 10 feet tall and 30 feet wide. The whole thing will be wrapped in plywood sheathing. Not part of the building LFRS. The frame will not support any live loads (no floor, roof, or ceiling bears on the top of this frame).
So, I am thinking of treating this as a nonstructural component support (ASCE Ch. 13).
I am trying to decide if the story drift limits of 12.12.1 apply to the frame. Chapter 13 does not list any drift limits, and does not . Practically speaking, I don't see the need.
Or is my plywood attachment to the frame per Ch. 13, and the frame is designed per Ch. 15, which defers back to Ch. 12, which does require drift limits...
Does anyone want to chime in?
I am engineering a steel tube entry frame inside of an existing building. Anchors to an existing raised slab, which needs to be checked (separate issue). Consists of two moment frames, set about 5 feet apart, each 10 feet tall and 30 feet wide. The whole thing will be wrapped in plywood sheathing. Not part of the building LFRS. The frame will not support any live loads (no floor, roof, or ceiling bears on the top of this frame).
So, I am thinking of treating this as a nonstructural component support (ASCE Ch. 13).
I am trying to decide if the story drift limits of 12.12.1 apply to the frame. Chapter 13 does not list any drift limits, and does not . Practically speaking, I don't see the need.
Or is my plywood attachment to the frame per Ch. 13, and the frame is designed per Ch. 15, which defers back to Ch. 12, which does require drift limits...
Does anyone want to chime in?