amecENG
Structural
- Jun 1, 2010
- 54
I was wondering how other engineers handle selecting beam sizes for residential contractors.
I recently sized a beam for a residential renovation and ever since I have been critical about how other engineers tackle this problem. In my case I picked a beam and became suspicious about how the contractor planned to connect it and support it. I ended up producing a full engineering drawing sheet with connections, built-up wood columns, baseplates, and footings. Even though I was only asked to select a beam I didn’t feel comfortable about everything else.
My main question is how far should you go as an engineer when someone asks you to design them a beam? Legally, do you have to trace the load path right down to the foundation to make sure everything is OK or can you just select the beam and let the building inspector pick up on everything else.
I know engineers, and sometimes architects, select beams all the time for houses but what prompted this question was that I went to look at buying a house a few weeks ago with a room under the garage. The house was just being constructed so everything was exposed and the garage floor looked very suspect. I questioned the contractor and he said that the floor was designed by an engineer. I agree that the steel beam may have been designed but there is no way that the columns and footings were. See attached pics. This made me think, since I just went through this myself, how dangerous it is to just pick a beam size and ignore the rest.
I recently sized a beam for a residential renovation and ever since I have been critical about how other engineers tackle this problem. In my case I picked a beam and became suspicious about how the contractor planned to connect it and support it. I ended up producing a full engineering drawing sheet with connections, built-up wood columns, baseplates, and footings. Even though I was only asked to select a beam I didn’t feel comfortable about everything else.
My main question is how far should you go as an engineer when someone asks you to design them a beam? Legally, do you have to trace the load path right down to the foundation to make sure everything is OK or can you just select the beam and let the building inspector pick up on everything else.
I know engineers, and sometimes architects, select beams all the time for houses but what prompted this question was that I went to look at buying a house a few weeks ago with a room under the garage. The house was just being constructed so everything was exposed and the garage floor looked very suspect. I questioned the contractor and he said that the floor was designed by an engineer. I agree that the steel beam may have been designed but there is no way that the columns and footings were. See attached pics. This made me think, since I just went through this myself, how dangerous it is to just pick a beam size and ignore the rest.