pcronin
Structural
- Nov 15, 2002
- 53
We have a small two story structure that the steel frame is out of plumb and a total of 7 columns exceed the erection tolerances of l/500 in the AISC Code of Standard Practice. The misalignment was noticed by the gage metal contractor while installing the curtain wall. They kept installing the curtain wall and had the top and bottoms of the columns surveyed. Of course the floor slabs have been placed and cured and the contractor completed the curtain wall.
Now we have been called in to determine if any remedial work is required. Aligning the structure is out of the question because on the floor slab and the curtain wall. We are starting by reviewing the columns with the added eccentricity and p-delta, but where should we go from there. We do not know if the misalignment is from fabrication errors, the steel was never plumb, the steel was plumb but then shifted, etc. Should we be concerned about possible residual stresses if the structure was plumb after erection and then shifted?
The top of steel at the roof is 30 feet. The lateral system is masonry shear walls so the column load is gravity only. The worst misalignment is 1.5” in the weak axis of the column.
Now we have been called in to determine if any remedial work is required. Aligning the structure is out of the question because on the floor slab and the curtain wall. We are starting by reviewing the columns with the added eccentricity and p-delta, but where should we go from there. We do not know if the misalignment is from fabrication errors, the steel was never plumb, the steel was plumb but then shifted, etc. Should we be concerned about possible residual stresses if the structure was plumb after erection and then shifted?
The top of steel at the roof is 30 feet. The lateral system is masonry shear walls so the column load is gravity only. The worst misalignment is 1.5” in the weak axis of the column.