flgulfcoasteng
Structural
- Nov 13, 2007
- 30
I would appreciate any opinions on determining the most correct exposure category for a residential (<30 ft mean roof height) structure located in a hurricane prone region (gulf coast of Florida).
This will follow the Florid Building Code Residential rules (a bit revised from ASCE 7) that I have attached for your convenience. I have also attached a crude sketch of the problem.
Scenario: low rise residential structure to be built 800’+ inland from a bay within surface roughness B. The bay has a 1000’ fetch (surface C) toward the coast. Additional 4500’ surface roughness B between the bay and the Gulf of Mexico.
Argument for Exposure B: per R302.2.1.4.3 (attached) under Exposure B the surface roughness B may prevail upwind over a distance of 1500 ft. (more than half of the 1500’ is roughness B (800’)). Is this a loose interpretation of prevail?
Argument for Exposure C: Upwind for 1500 ft roughness B is only 53%+ which is not considered prevailing.
I consider it Exposure C but would like some outside opinions before I force the issue. Thanks.
This will follow the Florid Building Code Residential rules (a bit revised from ASCE 7) that I have attached for your convenience. I have also attached a crude sketch of the problem.
Scenario: low rise residential structure to be built 800’+ inland from a bay within surface roughness B. The bay has a 1000’ fetch (surface C) toward the coast. Additional 4500’ surface roughness B between the bay and the Gulf of Mexico.
Argument for Exposure B: per R302.2.1.4.3 (attached) under Exposure B the surface roughness B may prevail upwind over a distance of 1500 ft. (more than half of the 1500’ is roughness B (800’)). Is this a loose interpretation of prevail?
Argument for Exposure C: Upwind for 1500 ft roughness B is only 53%+ which is not considered prevailing.
I consider it Exposure C but would like some outside opinions before I force the issue. Thanks.