JMASE
Structural
- Jan 29, 2023
- 35
I'm working up some design options for a client wanting to use heavy timber columns and beams for a series of one-bay frames parallel to each other for a greenhouse/conservatory. I have very limited options for braced frames or shear walls elsewhere, so these individual frames need to act as the lateral resisting elements. I'm considering cantilever columns for the frames, but the wind moments will be significantly larger than commercial moment resisting timber column connections can handle. So, the idea is to assemble 3-ply timber boards with, say 2 - 1/2 in. continuous plates sandwiched between the wood, and welding the plates to a moment resting base plate. I would call it a moment resisting "flitch column". I've read the DeStefano article, and the transformed section information is helpful. The difference is that in this situation the wind resisting member is a cantilever vs. a pin-pin beam, and, the combined section needs to be able to support gravity loads. Anyone have any insight on something like this?