P1ENG
Structural
- Aug 25, 2010
- 237
I have a small canopy that I am designing (10x17) that will be located just outside of a strip-mall supermarket (high walls, deep roof (upper roof length = 115')). The canopy is tight against the building, so I have drift loads on the canopy. Because of the depth of the supermarket, I am getting huge drift loads on my canopy (flat roof = 25 psf, total drift (surcharge plus flat) = 83 psf) and the width of drift is wider than my canopy (10').
Now to the question. Is there any documentation for reducing the snow loads in end zones? This is placed on one side of the building at the corner of, let's say, a 800'x115' plan view building. Higher end zone wind pressures to whip that snow up and a path to dump that snow "around the corner" seems like there should be something, somewhere that affords a break.
I normally wouldn't be concerned about the higher loads, but this is a cantilevered canopy (17' cantilever) so my foundation is getting ridiculous.
Juston Fluckey, SE, PE, AWS CWI
Engineering Consultant
Now to the question. Is there any documentation for reducing the snow loads in end zones? This is placed on one side of the building at the corner of, let's say, a 800'x115' plan view building. Higher end zone wind pressures to whip that snow up and a path to dump that snow "around the corner" seems like there should be something, somewhere that affords a break.
I normally wouldn't be concerned about the higher loads, but this is a cantilevered canopy (17' cantilever) so my foundation is getting ridiculous.
Juston Fluckey, SE, PE, AWS CWI
Engineering Consultant