kmart30
Structural
- Apr 28, 2016
- 183
Typically when designing residential new construction (north and central Florida)I am given the architectural plans and the truss shop drawings. I design all the shear walls, headers, posts, foundations, etc. etc. I take the loads from the truss shop drawings and take care of any large point loads, design my uplift connectors, gable bracing, and anything else that needs to get taken care of. If nothing pops out at me and everything checks out I approve the shops and submit these with my structural plans. Every now and then I will catch a truss or girder floating out in space or the truss engineer using the wrong wind speed/exposure. I will bring this up and it gets taken care of.
Recently I had a project in South Florida where when I asked who had the truss shop drawings they looked at me like I had 5 heads. They told me that I was to do the truss layout and then they would submit my plans and calcs to the city for plan review/permitting. To me this sounds arse backwards especially with 180mph wind speeds and a complex residential roof layout. They told me the trusses get designed after they get a permit to build. Yes I could put together a preliminary layout and get a general idea of the loads but why would I when I know the truss engineer is the one who produces the final truss layout and design? I told them no, they got all pissy but did get me truss shops and everything went smoothly.
I called around to some colleagues and even some other truss companies I have worked with and received a mix amount of answers. It seems to me that it might be based on the area you are designing in and how the contractors/municipality works. To me doing a preliminary layout and basing your design on it asks for issues down the road and things that might get missed once the final truss engineering is complete. Any feedback on what is typically done in other areas would be much appreciated.
Recently I had a project in South Florida where when I asked who had the truss shop drawings they looked at me like I had 5 heads. They told me that I was to do the truss layout and then they would submit my plans and calcs to the city for plan review/permitting. To me this sounds arse backwards especially with 180mph wind speeds and a complex residential roof layout. They told me the trusses get designed after they get a permit to build. Yes I could put together a preliminary layout and get a general idea of the loads but why would I when I know the truss engineer is the one who produces the final truss layout and design? I told them no, they got all pissy but did get me truss shops and everything went smoothly.
I called around to some colleagues and even some other truss companies I have worked with and received a mix amount of answers. It seems to me that it might be based on the area you are designing in and how the contractors/municipality works. To me doing a preliminary layout and basing your design on it asks for issues down the road and things that might get missed once the final truss engineering is complete. Any feedback on what is typically done in other areas would be much appreciated.