Power Point 1 - Detailing Structural Steel Part1
Power Point 1 - Detailing Structural Steel Part1
Power Point 1 - Detailing Structural Steel Part1
MEM50212
Detailing structural steel
1. Basics
• Projections Detailing of steelwork within Australia is undertaken in third (3rd) angle projection.
Bolts
Indication of bolts
and bolt holes
Welding
Welding is indicated by
standard symbols given by
standard AS1101-3
Machining symbols
In structural detailing, dimensions should be given to the centre lines of universal sections and
to the backs of channels and angles.
• Detail drawings
• General arrangements drawings
• The general arrangement drawings are similar to those provided by the engineer but include
• Many structures require more than one arrangement drawing, especially when several floor plans
are required.
• An elevation of each side of the building and a plan view of the roof and the first floor are shown.
• A typical cross-section is essential as it is often the view that contains the most information on the
building and it is sometimes drawn to a larger scale, or even depicted on a separate drawing.
1. Erection marks of only the girts, vertical bracing, door framing and rafters are given
2. Only special dimensions are given, eg the location of the roller shutter door.
Cross-section
Detail drawings depict every individual structural member and component in the job and include
5. Details of attachments such as cleats, brackets, base plates, stiffeners, bearing plates, etc.
• AS1100
• AS1101
• website: www.onesteel.com (Hot rolled and Structural steel Products- 7th edition)
3. Beams and girders
• The most efficient shape has been found to be the universal section, where the
two relatively thick flanges provide the resistance to bending and the thin web
the resistance to shear.
• The commonly used members are the hot-rolled universal section
• Beams are generally placed with their web in the same plane as the applied
loads.
Shop drawings
• The required information for fabrication of a beam is shown on a shop detail drawing.
• The shop drawing rarely shows any of the adjacent members to which the beam will later be connected in the field.
• The location of open holes in the beam connections must match the location of similar holes in the supporting
members.
Beam detailing practice
Beams are drawn as though they
are viewed from the bottom of the
• Layout of Drawings drawing of the floor plan
• Surface treatment
General Notes:
Steel:Grade 300 MPa
• General Notes Bolts:M20 Grade 8.8/S UNO
Bolt holes: 22dia
Mark beam ends 'North' or 'West' on top flange, as indicated.
4. Columns
A column is a member whose main function is to carry compressive loading. Columns are placed vertically
in a structure and resist gravity or downward loads. In addition, they are often required to withstand bending
moments produced by, for example, side-wind loading on the building, or by eccentrically applied vertical
loading, such as crane loading.
• All columns require a base plate at their lower end to provide the necessary attachment to the concrete
foundation and to transmit the load (and possibly the moment) in the column shaft into the foundation.
• Wherever possible, base plates should be attached to the columns in the shop typically by welding.
Where the base plate is very large, and especially if it is a heavy slab, it may have to be sent to site
separately.
• In tall buildings the heights of the columns will be greater than the
lengths of steel section available from the mills, or the lengths of
column that can be transported to site. In such cases one or more
splices will be required within the length of a column.
• Portal frame is one of the most popular forms of construction for small to
medium span industrial buildings.
• Rolled universal sections are utilised for the columns and rafters of the frames,
which are usually designed by elastic analysis.
Cold-formed lipped c-
sections and z-sections
Purlins and Girts are
connected to the structure by
means of bolting to cleats,
which in turn are usually
welded to the rafters and
columns.
On larger spans, bridging is
used at mid-span or third-span
points of purlins and girts.
MEM50212