JStephen
Mechanical
- Aug 25, 2004
- 8,713
One of my co-workers asked a question that I have never had occasion to look into. At his church, they were going to make a free-standing steel cross about six feet high with a concrete or steel base. The question was, what size to make the base?
This will be inside, so there's no wind load, it's a non-seismic area, and the base will just be on top of the floor, not anchored to it. The only real loading is the possiblity that someone will lean against it or bump into it or pull it over on themselves (kids, you know!).
Now, it seems this would be exactly the same situation you'd have with a refrigerator or storage cabinet or vending machine or similar heavy but tippable items. Are there any requirements of any kind as to how stable stuff like this ought to be? Or can you just balance a beam on end and call it good?
This will be inside, so there's no wind load, it's a non-seismic area, and the base will just be on top of the floor, not anchored to it. The only real loading is the possiblity that someone will lean against it or bump into it or pull it over on themselves (kids, you know!).
Now, it seems this would be exactly the same situation you'd have with a refrigerator or storage cabinet or vending machine or similar heavy but tippable items. Are there any requirements of any kind as to how stable stuff like this ought to be? Or can you just balance a beam on end and call it good?