I have been tasked with evaluating an existing barn for snow loading. The owner is reconstructing an arena that was added to the original barn which failed under last winter's snow loading. The pertinent facts are:
- Original barn building permit pulled in 1973.
- Original arena was constructed before the original barn was complete.
- New arena roof is 4' higher than the existing barn, as was the previous arena.
- Eave-to-ridge distance is 43.5' along the 4:12 slope.
- This is a pole-barn style construction with principle roof members at 5' centers.
- Purlins are 2x4s at 24" centers running over top of the roof members.
- Roofing is sheet metal.
Using the snow load recommendations of ASCE 7-10 and the 2005 NDS design methodology, I find that the principle members are a bit overstressed under the maximum unbalanced snow load.
Using the building code snow loads of 1971 (drifting & unbalanced not specifically addressed) and the 1968 NDS design methodology, I find that most members look good.
Worthy of note: The 1971 building code has a higher magnitude of uniform snow load than does ASCE 7-10. However, the 1971 building code does not specifically address unbalanced & drift loading and, I suspect, leaves the evaluation of drifting and unbalanced load to the judgement of the designer.
Obviously this roof has sustained almost 30 seasons of snow loads with no ill effects. There is no evidence that last season's record snowfall caused any distress in the roof framing or connections.
My question for those who follow this forum: Would you use the snow loading of ASCE 7-10 (lower overall magnitude but higher drift loading) with the 1968 NDS design values and design methodology for wood (most likely what the original building was designed around)?
Ralph
Structures Consulting
Northeast USA