KootK
Structural
- Oct 16, 2001
- 18,590
So I've got a louvre that occupies one entire exterior wall bay of a a pedestrian bridge. I've been asked to evaluate said louver for environmental loads AND guardrail loads. Very glamorous. I'm seeking guidance with respect to the following:
1) Are there any standards out there for louver design? Guidance with regard to treatment of wind and ice loads on a partially open element?
2) Does it make sense to assume that the one horizontal louver at around 42" IS the guardrail for all intents and purposes? Seems kind of extreme. Could one at least say that a few louvers near to 42" share the load?
3) Following the code to the letter, one would have to apply the guardrail load in any direction. That could be problematic here as that would mean applying the load at 45 degrees, weak axis to the louver z-shapes which surely suck for that.
4) Is it even appropriate to be considering a louver as a guardrail? Fundamentally, I feel that a louver is really a permutation of a wall. I might be throwing myself under the "bad engineer" bus here but it's not as though I've been checking my above grade exterior walls for guard rail loads. Although I do do that for glass in some instances...
I'd be grateful for help with any or all of points one through four above. Guardrail struggles seem to be a ubiquitous right of passage on this forum. My tour of duty is probably overdue.
I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.
1) Are there any standards out there for louver design? Guidance with regard to treatment of wind and ice loads on a partially open element?
2) Does it make sense to assume that the one horizontal louver at around 42" IS the guardrail for all intents and purposes? Seems kind of extreme. Could one at least say that a few louvers near to 42" share the load?
3) Following the code to the letter, one would have to apply the guardrail load in any direction. That could be problematic here as that would mean applying the load at 45 degrees, weak axis to the louver z-shapes which surely suck for that.
4) Is it even appropriate to be considering a louver as a guardrail? Fundamentally, I feel that a louver is really a permutation of a wall. I might be throwing myself under the "bad engineer" bus here but it's not as though I've been checking my above grade exterior walls for guard rail loads. Although I do do that for glass in some instances...
I'd be grateful for help with any or all of points one through four above. Guardrail struggles seem to be a ubiquitous right of passage on this forum. My tour of duty is probably overdue.

I like to debate structural engineering theory -- a lot. If I challenge you on something, know that I'm doing so because I respect your opinion enough to either change it or adopt it.