tncastle
Structural
- Jan 10, 2011
- 1
I designed a single story wood structure, the inside corners of the exterior walls are separating at the top, but are tight at the bottom. The building as 80 feet wide so we went with a three piece truss design.
I'm just wondering if anyone else has run into this problem? Here's a little more info.
I?s built in Minnesota on frost footings with knee walls in the crawl space located to support the roof system. I don't have the soils report in front of me but the area it was built in is swampy. We designed it not to need interior walls for wind shear and because of an architectual design the carpenters didn't tie the top plates together. They retaped the inside corners after one seasonal cycle and the corners recracked.
The project managers are trying to pin the entire fix on the carpenters because the failure to tie the top plates together. My feeling is its just sesonal movement, any ideas? Thanks
I'm just wondering if anyone else has run into this problem? Here's a little more info.
I?s built in Minnesota on frost footings with knee walls in the crawl space located to support the roof system. I don't have the soils report in front of me but the area it was built in is swampy. We designed it not to need interior walls for wind shear and because of an architectual design the carpenters didn't tie the top plates together. They retaped the inside corners after one seasonal cycle and the corners recracked.
The project managers are trying to pin the entire fix on the carpenters because the failure to tie the top plates together. My feeling is its just sesonal movement, any ideas? Thanks