Structural Systems: The Lecture Notes of Ce012 Structural System Principles

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THE LECTURE NOTES OF CE012 STRUCTURAL SYSTEM PRINCIPLES

STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS

ISTANBUL KÜ LTÜ R UNIVERSITY, ENGINEERING FACULTY


CIVIL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
Dr. Erdal COSKUN
INTRODUCTION
• Thirty thousand years ago, people
roamed from place to place hunting
animals for food and looking for
wild plants to eat. As they were
always moving, they did not build
houses.
• Much later on, they began to put
up shelters, tents made of
skins, and tried
animal protect
themselves
to from
the conditions. weather
• They might find caves where they
cook and sleep. Caves were better
Capodocia-Türkiye
places to live in, but tents had the
advantege of being easily moved.

2
BRIEF HISTORY OF STRUCTURAL
ENGINEERING
• Structural engineering has been in use since ages, and one of the greatest ancient
structures was the Pyramid of Giza that was constructed in the 26th century BC. The
major structures during the medieval period were the pyramids since the shape of the
pyramids is basically stable.

• Theoretical knowledge about the structures was limited, and construction techniques
were based on experience only. The real advancement in the structural engineering was
achieved in the 19th century during the industrial revolution when significant progress
was achieved in the sciences of structural analysis and materials science.

• No record exists of the first calculations of the strength of structural members or the
behavior of structural material, but the profession of structural engineer only really
took shape with the industrial revolution and the re-invention of concrete. The physical
sciences underlying structural engineering began to be understood in the Renaissance
and have been developing ever since.

3
PYRAMID OF GIZA

4
Temple of Artemis Hanging Gardens of Babylon
One of the ancient world’s largest temples, the Temple of Babylon’s hanging gardens were constructed by King Nebuchadnezzar
Artemis in Turkey was completed in 550 BCE. Soaring 18 II in modern-day Iraq in about 600 BCE. These gardens may have
m high, the temple consisted of a colonnade of about 106 been named after the lush vines trailing down the tiered structure,
columns encircling a marble sanctuary covered by a tiled which looked to be suspended in the desert sky.
roof.

5
The building is circular with a portico of three ranks of huge granite Corinthian columns (eight in the first rank and two groups of
four behind) under a pediment opening into the rotunda, under a coffered, concrete dome, with a central opening (oculus) open to the
sky. Almost two thousand years after it was built, the Pantheon's dome is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. The
height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same,
43.3 meters. It is one of the best preserved of all Roman buildings.

6
The Colosseum Chichen Itza
Completed in 80 CE, the Colosseum was Ancient Built by the Mayan civilization between 1000 and 1200 CE,
Rome’s premier entertainment venue. Reigning El Castillo is part of Mexico’s ancient Chichen Itza site. With
emperors hosted epic contests inside the huge a temple at the top, the 24 m step-pyramid is dedicated to the
amphitheater, with gladiators (trained fighters) battling feathered-serpent god Kukulcan.
in front of up to 50,000 people.

7
Taj Mahal The Great Wall of China
After 12 years of construction, the Taj Mahal China’s first emperor Qin Shi Huangdi began
complex in Agra, India, was completed in 1648. Its construction on the Great Wall in about 200 BC. With
centerpiece is the white marble-tiled mausoleum fortified walls made of packed-dirt, stonework, and rocks,
dedicated to the Mughal emperor Shah Jahan’s wife, succeeding dynasties added to the structure over many
Mumtaz Mahal. centuries. Today, it stretches 6,508 km east to west.

8
HAGIA SOPHIA-ISTANBUL

Famous in particular for its massive dome, it is considered the typical example of Byzantine
architecture and to have "changed the history of architecture.”
It was the largest cathedral in the world for nearly a thousand years, until the completion of
the Seville Cathedral in 1520.It was designed by two architects, Isidore of Miletus and
Anthemius of Tralles.

9
THE GREAT ARCHITECT SINAN
(MIMAR SINAN)
• Mimar Sinan (born 1490, Turkey-
died July 17, 1588,
Constantinople [now Istanbul])
was the chief Ottoman Architect
and Civil Engineer for Sultans
Suleyman I, Selim II, and Murad
III.
• By mid-life Sinan acquires a
reputation as a valued military
engineer and is brought to the
attention of Sultan Suleyman
(1520-66) who in 1537 appoints
Sinan (aged fifty) as head of the
office of royal architects.

10
THE GREAT ARCHITECT SINAN
(MIMAR SINAN)

When Sinan reached the age of 70, he had completed the


Süleymaniye Mosque (Istanbul) complex.
This building, situated on one of the hills of Istanbul facing the
Golden Horn, and built in the name of Süleyman the Magnificent, is
one of the symbolic monuments of the period. The diameter of the dome, which exceeds the 31 m of the Selimiye
Mosque (Edirne) which Sinan completed when he was 80, is the
most outstanding example of the level of achievement reached by
Sinan.

11
MASONRY STRUCTURES

Yedikule Walls,Istanbul

Galata Tower, Istanbul

12
SHORT REVIEW OF STRUCTURAL
MECHANICS AND HISTORICAL
DEVELOPMENT

13
ENGINEERING MECHANICS
Mechanics, is the branch of physics concerned with the
behaviour of physical bodies when subjected to forces or
displacements, and the subsequent effect of the bodies on
their environment.
❖ Statics - bodies at rest or moving with uniform velocity
❖ Dynamics - bodies accelerating

– Strength of Materials - deformation of bodies under forces.


– Structural Mechanics - focus on behavior of
structures under loads.

14
ENGINEERING MECHANICS

Rigid Body Deformable Body Fluid


Mechanics Mechanics
Mechanics
Strength of
Statics
Materials

Dynamics

15
STRUCTURAL MECHANICS
• Structural mechanics deals with forces and motions of
structural systems, it is necessary to study the forces, the
motions, and the relation between them.
• It is an extension in application of mechanics of rigid and
deformable bodies.
• Rigid body is a body that ideally does not deform under a
force.
BUT !
– All material deforms.
– When deformations are small assume the body is rigid.

16
THE HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT

• The historical development of mechanics of materials is a fascinating blend of both


theory and experiment Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) and Galileo Galilei (1564–
1642) performed experiments to determine the strength of wires, bars, and beams.
• Leonhard Euler (1707–1783) developed the mathematical theory of columns and
calculated the theoretical critical load of a column in 1744, long before any
experimental evidence existed to show the significance of his results.

17
GALILEO'S (NOT QUITE RIGHT) THEORY
OF BENDING STRESS
Galileo developed a
hypothesis concerning
bending stress that
was sensible but not
correct.
A better theory was
not widely understood
until more than 60
years later.

18
SIR ISAAC NEWTON
• Sir Isaac Newton, (4 January 1643 – 31
March 1727) was an English physicist,
mathematician, astronomer, natural
philosopher, alchemist, and theologian
and one of the most influential men in
human history. His Philosophiæ
Naturalis Principia Mathematica,
published in 1687, is considered to be
the most influential book in the history
of science, laying the groundwork for
most of classical mechanics. In this
work, Newton described universal
gravitation and the three laws of
motion which dominated the scientific
view of the physical universe for the
next three centuries.

“If I have seen further than others, it is because


I have stood on the shoulders of giants.”

19
TIME-LINE
• 384: Aristoteles
• 1452: Leonardo da Vinci made many contributions.
• 1638: Galileo Galilei published the book "Two New Sciences" in which he examined the failure of simple
structures.
• 1660: Hooke's law by Robert Hooke. =E.  l=F.l/(E.A)
• 1687: Issac Newton published "Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica" which contains the
Newton's laws of motion. F=m.a (force=mass x acceleration)
• 1750: Euler-Bernoulli beam equation.
• 1700: Daniel Bernoulli introduced the principle of virtual work.
• 1707: Leonhard Euler developed the theory of buckling of columns.
• 1826: Claude-Louis Navier published a treatise on the elastic bahaviors of structures.
• 1835: Mohr deformations of structures graphical methods.
• 1873: Carlo Alberto Castigliano presented his dissertation "Intorno ai sistemi elastici", which contains his
theorem for computing displacement as partial derivative of the strain energy. This theorem includes the
method of least work as a special case.
• 1936: Hardy Cross' publication of the moment distribution method which was later recognized as a form of
the relaxation method applicable to the problem of flow in pipe-network.
• 1941: Alexander Hrennikoff submitted his PhD thesis in MIT on the discretization of plane elasticity
problems using a lattice framework.
• 1942: R. Courant divided a domain into finite subregions.
• 1956: J. Turner, R. W. Clough, H. C. Martin, and L. J. Topp's paper on the "Stiffness and Deflection of
Complex Structures". This paper introduces the name "finite-element method" and is widely recognized as
the first comprehensive treatment of the method as it is known today.

20
SUPPORTS
A support contributes to keeping
a structure in place by restraining
one or more degrees of
freedom.

1 ROLLER SUPPORT
Free in X-direction
Fixed in Y-direction
Free in rotation

2 PIN SUPPORT
Fixed in X-direction
Fixed in Y-direction
Free in rotation

3 FIXED SUPPORT
Fixed in X-direction
Fixed in Y-direction
Fixed in rotation

21
SUPPORT DETAILS

PIN

Steel Bridge in Budapest (Hungary)

ROLLER

Steel Bridge in Baja (Hungary)

22
LOAD
Load is an external force.
S
Gravity Loads
▪ Dead loads (Static)
▪ Live loads (Static)
▪ Snow loads (Static)
Lateral Loads
▪ Wind loads (Dynamic)
▪ Earthquake loads (Dynamic )
Special Load Cases
▪ Thermal loads
▪ Blast loads
▪ Impact loads
▪ Settlement loads

23
STATIC LOAD VS.DYNAMIC LOAD

▪ A static load is a mechanical force applied slowly to an


assembly or object.

▪ A dynamic load, on the other hand, results when loading


conditions are changing with time.
-Example of a dynamic load:
Earthquake (Seismic) loads.
-Example of a static load:
Weight of a bridge.

24
UNCERTAINTY
• Dead loads can be predicted with some confidence.
• Live load, environmental load, earthquake load predictions are much
more uncertain.
– E.g., it is nearly impossible to say what will be the exact maximum
occupancy live load in the classroom.
– It is also difficult to say how that load will be distributed in the
room.
• Structural codes account for this uncertainty two ways:
– We chose a conservative estimate for the load:
• E.g., a “50-year” snow load, which is a snow load that occurs,
on average, only once in 50 years.
– We factor that estimate upwards just to be sure.

25
LATERAL LOAD-GRAVITY LOAD
Lateral Load Vertical Load

Deformation

Shear Force

Bending Moment

26
DYNAMIC LOADS

27
WIND LOADS
Pressure on wind side
• Suction on lee side
• Uplift on roof leeside
1- Wind load on gabled building
2- Wind load on dome or vault
3- Protected city building
4- Exposed tall building
5- Exposed wide façade
6- Building forms can increase
wind speed

28
EARTHQUAKE LOADS
• Earthquake (Seismic) forces
are inertia forces. When any
object, such as a building,
experiences acceleration,
inertia force is generated
when its mass resists the
acceleration. We experience
inertia forces while travelling.
• Especially when standing in a
bus or train, an changes in
speed (accelerations) cause us
to lose our balance and either
force us to change our position
or to hold on more firmly.

29
EARTHQUAKE LOADS
• Motion originates
outside of a building.
• Effect is internal.
• Forces generated by
inertia of building.
• Mass as ground moves
below the structure.

30
SEISMICITY OF EUROPA AND TURKIYE

31
BIGGEST CHALLENGE…
In Türkiye, the biggest challenge of engineering is dealing with the threat of major
earthquakes.

Marmara EQ, 1999

32
EARTHQUAKE LOAD EFFECTS

Taiwan-1999

Türkiye-1999

33
EARTHQUAKE LOAD EFFECTS

Hansin, Japan 1995


34
SETTLEMENT LOADS

Pissa Tower, Italy. Soil Profile of Pissa Tower

35
LOAD PATH
• Load Path is the term used to describe the
path by which loads are transmitted to the
foundations.

• Different structures have different load paths.

• Some structures have only one path.

• Some have several (redundancy good).

36
LOAD PATH IN AN ARCH

Arch

Continuity Principle

37
LOAD PATH OF EIFFEL TOWER

Free Body Diagrams (FBD) a sketch of all or part of a structure, detached from its support.

38
LOAD PATH OF JOHN HANCOCK
BUILDING

Chicago, USA

39
CABLE- STAYED, SUSPENSION BRIDGE
LOAD PATH

40
WHAT IS STRUCTURAL
ENGINEERING?
◗ Structural engineering, being considered a field of specialty
within the realm of civil engineering, is the application of math
and science to the design of structures, including buildings,
bridges, storage tanks, transmission towers, roller coasters,
aircraft, space vehicles, and much more, in such a way that the
resulting product will safely resist all loads imposed upon it.

◗ In order to develop an adequate understanding of structures


that are designed, an engineer must make justifiable
approximations and assumptions in regards to materials used
and loading imposed and must also simplify the problem in
order to develop a workable mathematical model.

41
EXAMPLES

Possibly the most enjoyable application of structural engineering! (Photo by


Gustavo Vanderput)

42
EXAMPLES

Eiffel Tower, Paris


New York

43
DESIGN PROCESS IN STRUCTURAL
ENGINEERING
• Select material for construction (RC, Steel, Wood).

• Determine appropriate structural system for a


particular case.

• Determine forces acting on a structure and


determine internal forces (Structural Analysis).

• Calculate size of members and connections to avoid


failure or excessive deformations (Structural Design,
RC, Steel, Wood).

44
STRUCTURAL REQUIREMENTS
• The parameters of equilibrium, strength and
rigidity and geometric stability are clearly crucial
for any discussion involving structural mechanics.
• It must be capable of achieving a state of
equilibrium, it must be stable, it must have
adequate strength and it must have adequate
rigidity.
• They are all, however, sufficiently distinct, and
each has its own particular explanatory power.
(See Engineering Mechanics and Strength of Materials Lecture notes)

45
MATERIALS SUITABLE FOR VARIOUS
FORMS OF STRUCTURE

• All reinforced concrete including precast


• All metal (e.g. mild-steel, steel,
structural stainless steel or alloyed
aluminum,
• All timber
• Laminated timber
• Metal/RC combined
• Plastic-coated textile material
• Fiber reinforced plastic
46
RECOGNITION OF STRUCTURAL
PROBLEMS
• Very heavy and unusual loads.
• Very long spans and high-rise systems.
• Very long, or thin, or tall walls, columns, or struts.
• Long members that meet in small joints.
• Unanticipated loads or stresses.
• Probability of the building changing occupancy
or functional use.

47
FUNCTION AND FORM
• The architectural design and form of buildings is
influenced by the type of the building and by its
function.
• Buildings such as residential, commercial, industrial,
transport, educational, health-care, leisure and
agricultural buildings are designed with features
characteristic for the individual building type.
• Structural systems also have an interrelation with the
type and function of the buildings. As a consequence
there exist school-building, residential building and
other systems.

48
FUNCTION AND FORM
• Technical progress (prefabrication, mechanization, etc.)
resulted in the industrialization of building and, as a
specific form of this, ‘system building’.
• Basically we can differentiate two types of systems. The
first of these is the technical system of buildings
(Ahuja, 1997), which consists of:
• the structural system
• the architectural system
• the services and equipment (lighting, HVAC, power
security, elevators, telecommunications, functional
equipment, etc.).
49
FUNCTION AND FORM
• The second system is composed of:
• the process of architectural, structural
engineering
and design and their documents
• economic analysis, data and including
quantity
results surveying, feasibility studies, risk
analysis
• management of design, construction and use of
buildings and structures (facility management)
including cooperation of various organizations
and persons involved in the construction process.
50
ARCHITECTURAL AND STRUCTURAL
FORM EXAMPLES

51
SELECTION OF STRUCTURAL SYSTEM
CRITERIA

- Safety
- Aesthetics
- Serviceability
- Reuse-Sustainability
- Constructability
- Economy-Cost
52
STRUCTURAL ARRANGEMENTS
DEFINITION OF STRUCTURE
• Structural system is one of the life-support
systems in a building.
• People die from errors in structural design. It has
life and death consequences.
• Building structure is the controlled flow of force
through routes formed by resistive materials in
order to shelter three dimensional space.
• The layout of the routes along which the forces
flow is the basis used to name alternative
structural systems, and from which a designer
will normally choose.
54
COMPONENTS OF A BUILDING STRUCTURE

1)Loads are the forces acting on a


building.
2)The superstructure is the part of
the resistive building frame above the
ground.
3)The lateral support system resist
horizontal loads such as wind or
earthquake.
4)The foundation is the part of the
force resistive frame below the
ground line.
5)Soil and Geology are the material
into which all the loads must
ultimately dissipated. (Geotechnical
Issues)

55
STRUCTURES ARE NEEDED FOR THE
FOLLOWING PURPOSES

• To enclose space for enviromental control;


• To support people, equipment, materials
etc at requried locations in space;
• To contain and retain materials;
• To span gaps for the transport of
people, equipment, materials etc.

56
STRUCTURAL ARRANGEMENTS
There are three basic structural arrangements: (Heinrich Engel
Classification)
• Post-and-beam are assemblies of vertical and horizontal
structures Post-and-beam structures are either load bearing
elements.
structures or frame structures. wall

57
STRUCTURAL ARRANGEMENTS
• Semi-form-active structures have forms whose geometry is neither post-
and- beam nor form-active. The elements therefore contain the full range
of internal force types (i.e. axial, bending moment and shear force).

58
A TRADITIONAL EXAMPLE FOR SEMI-
FORM-ACTIVE STRUCTURES

The yurt (Turkish word) is the traditional house of the nomadic peoples (Turk, Mongolian) of
Middle Asia.
It consists of a highly sophisticated arrangement of self-bracing semi-form-active timber
structural elements which support a non-structural felt skin. It is light and its domed shape,
which combines maximum internal volume with minimum surface area, is ideal for heat
conservation and also minimizes wind resistance.

59
STRUCTURAL ARRANGEMENTS
• Fully form-active structures are systems of flexible or rigid
planes able to resist tension, compression or shear, in which
the redirection of forces is effected by mobilization of
sectional forces
• Included in this group are compressive shells, tensile cable
networks and air supported tensile-membrane structures.
• Form-active structures are almost invariably statically
indeterminate and this, together with the fact that they are
difficult to construct, makes them very expensive in the
present age, despite the fact that they make an efficient use
of structural material.

60
FULLY FORM-ACTIVE STRUCTURES

Cable nets, grid-shells, tensile membranes, hyperbolic parapoloids--these things


offer the promise of significant material efficiency and dramatic forms by
leveraging the intrinsic stability of doubly curved geometries.

61
NETS AND MEMBRANES

Frei Otto: German Pavilion @ Expo 67 in Montreal Frei Otto: Detail of Munich Olympic Complex, 1972

62
Istanbul

HIGH-RISE STRUCTURES
“A building whose height creates different conditions in
the design, construction, and use than those that
exist in common buildings of a certain region and
period.”

The Council of Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat

64
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION OF
HIGH-RISE BUILDINGS
Tall Buildings in Regions ( 1982).

Tall Buildings in Regions (2006).

Emporis Corporation April 2004

65
HIGH-RISE STRUCTURES
• The present time the tallest building is not in the USA or another
industrialized country but in a developing country.
• From the ten tallest buildings in the world four only are in New York
and Chicago with the others being located in cities in developing
countries (Kuala Lumpur, Shanghai, Guangzhou, Hong Kong).
• To construct that high, a number of technical problems had and
have to be solved. In the forefront of these stands structural safety.
This includes not only sufficient compressive strength of the
superstructure and foundation but also safety against earthquake,
strong wind, impact action (aircraft crash, explosion, etc.), human
discomfort from vibration and horizontal movement.

66
HIGH-RISE STRUCTURES
• Structural design development has resulted in new types of structure. The
new potentials in structural design were, on the one hand, results in
science and engineering knowledge and, on the other hand, new demands
of clients.
• This was the case, for example, with building higher buildings and with
longer spans. The overall pattern of architectural and structural design has
been the interrelation of techniques, construction technology, artistic
ambition and functions.
• The ability to form and shape a high-rise building is strongly influenced the
structural system.
• Building weight and cost increase nonlinearly with increasing height due
to lateral loads.
• Efficient structural and material systems are needed to reduce weight and
cost.

67
STRUCTURAL SYSTEMS OF
HIGH-RISE BUILDINGS
A rough classification can be made with respect to effectiveness in resisting lateral
loads.
• Moment resisting frame systems (Resists lateral deformation by joint rotation)
• Braced frame, shear wall systems (Lateral forces are resisted by axial actions of
bracing and columns )
• Core and outrigger systems (Lateral and gravity loads supported by central
core)
• Tubular systems
– Framed tubes
– Trussed tubes
– Bundled tubes
• Hybrid systems (Combine advantages of different structural and material systems)
Structural system development of tall buildings has been a continuously evolving
process.

68
COMPARISON OF STRUCTURAL
SYSTEMS

69
EARLY SKYSCRAPERS

Flatiron Building

Structure: Steel Frame

Height: 285 ft

Year: 1903

Façade: Non-structural
limestone

70
EARLY SKYSCRAPERS

Empire State Building

Structure: Steel Frame, Vertical


Truss

Height: 1,250 ft (1453 ft to top of


spire)

Year: 1931

71
TUBULAR SYSTEMS
• Majority of structural elements around
WTC the perimeter.
• Sides normal to lateral load resist bending.
• Sides parallel to lateral load resist shear.
• Closely spaced exterior columns.
• Minimize number of interior columns.

13- Load-bearing external wall - Perimeter frame 17-


Core box column 450 mm square
20- Floor slab

Various Plan Types of Tubular Systems

72
SEARS TOWER, CHICAGO, USA

73
HANCOCK AND ONTERIE BUILDINGS USA

Steel, 344 m RC, 174 m


The strength of the building’s structural system is expressed in its facade.
Fazlur Rahman Khan,The Einstein of Structural Engineering
74
BURJ KHALIFA (BURJ DUBAI)

75
BURJ KHALIFA TOWER MODELS

Source: Irwin, P.A. and Baker, W.F. “The Burj Dubai Tower Wind
Engineering, Structure magazine, NCSEA/CASE/SEI, June 2006, pp. 28-31.

76
CN TOWER TORONTO,CANADA
Standing 553.3 meters tall, it was completed in 1976, becoming the world's tallest free-standing
structure and world's tallest tower. It held both records for 34 years until the completion of the
Burj Dubai in Dubai and Canton Tower in Guangzhou.

77
TRANSAMERICA BUILDING, SAN
FRANCISCO, USA

The Vierendeel Truss

78
WEST COAST TRANSMISSION
BUILDING, VANCOUVER,CANADA
Multi-story building with suspended
floors. In this 12-story building, the
floors are hung from the top of the
central 270-ft. high concrete core by
six sets of continuous steel bridge
cables.
The arrangement of the cables can be
seen at the top of the building. Floors
were erected from the top down. The
core is 36 ft. X 36 ft. in section, and
can be seen at both top and bottom
of the building.

79
BMW BUILDING, GERMANY
• The main tower consists of four vertical
cylinders standing next to and across from each
other. Each cylinder is divided horizontally in its
center by a mold in the façade. Notably, these
cylinders do not stand on the ground, they are
suspended on a central support tower.
• During the construction, individual floors were
assembled on the ground and then elevated.
The tower has a diameter of 52.30 meters. The
building has 22 occupied floors, two of which
are basements and 18 serve as office space.

80
TAIPEI 101, TAIWAN

The Taipei 101 tower has 101 stories above ground and five underground. Upon
its completion Taipei 101 claimed the official records for:
Ground to highest architectural structure : 508 m Previously held by the Petronas Towers 451.9 m Ground to
roof: 449.2 m. Formerly held by the Willis Tower 442 m.
Ground to highest occupied floor: 438 m

81
TAIPEI 101, TAIWAN

Taipei 101 is designed to withstand the typhoon winds and earthquake tremors common in its area of
the Asia-Pacific. Planners aimed for a structure that could withstand gale winds of 60 m/s and the
strongest earthquakes likely to occur in a 2,500 year cycle.

82
COMPARISON OF SKYSCRAPERS

83
LONG SPAN STRUCTURES
LONG-SPAN STRUCTURES
• Spaces a large the in
surface with or progress
with without technology has
internal columns and allowed
this restriction to be
bridges with long spans exceeded to the
have been that in the twentieth
extent
since ancient times.
constructed century space coverings
• Domes, up to with spans of 300 meters
nineteenth
the century, and suspension bridges
had a maximum with a span of 2000–
span
meters andof it 50
only 3000 meters were being
is relatively constructed.
recently that 85
LONG-SPAN STRUCTURES
• The last 150 years have not only tensile membrane structures. Then
brought with them a up to the present time, a
gradual increase in span (and variety of new structures
great
height) but also a considerable were added to list
the of wide-span
number of new structural and structures: steel, aluminium,
schemes architectural formsfor timber, membranes, space trusses
spaces: shells, covering (with one, two or three layers) and
vaults, trusses, and
domes, tensile structures (Karni, 2000).
space grids
membranes (Chilton, 2000).
• A great variety of domes have been
developed: Schwedler, geodesic,
and lamella folded plate domes.
• Shells may be not only domes but
also cylindrical and prestressed
86
LONG-SPAN STRUCTURES

Following the Pantheon dome in


Rome, in the early second
century AD, it was not until 1700
years later that domes of similar
size were built and it was only in
the twentieth century that the
span of the Pantheon was
surpassed.

87
SOLID BEAM

• The weight of a beam is proportional to its depth, which must increase as


span increases. Thus, the ratio of self-weight (dead loads) to live loads
carried becomes less favorable as span is increased.
• The relationship between structural efficiency and intensity of applied
load, which is the other significant factor affecting ‘economy of means’,
can also be fairly easily demonstrated.

88
SOLID BEAM VS. TRUSS
As the span of beam increases
it becomes more
uneconomical use solid
to beam (heavy).
An open beam or truss similar
to is used.
Just as for a simple
beam under vertical
Truss
forces
loading,the
in the upper
members
chord are compressive and
those in the lower chord
tensile. Shear forces are
resisted by the web members
and the forces in these may be
either tensile or compressive.

89
COMMON PLANE TRUSSES

Detail of pin-jointed truss connection.

90
APPLICATIONS OF PLANE TRUSSES
• Light weight trusses still dominate the residential
and small commercial building market.
• Heavy steel trusses are widely used for small to
medium size bridges, large warehouse roofs,
aircraft hangers, factories, train stations, and
sport facilities such as basketball arenas and
gyms.
• Bridges are the most nonarchitectural application
for truss systems. Wheter for rail road, trusses
are used worldwide as soon as normal beam
spans are exceed.

91
APPLICATIONS OF TRUSSES

Puhket-Thailand

92
APPLICATIONS OF TRUSSES

Bayonne Bridge, New York, USA Span 510 m.

93
THE VIERENDEEL TRUSS
• The Vierendeel truss is a truss where the members are not
triangulated but form rectangular openings, and is a frame
with fixed joints that are capable of transferring and resisting
bending moments.

• Regular trusses comprise members that are commonly assumed


to have pinned joints, with the implication that no moments
exist at the jointed ends.

• This style of truss was named after the


Belgian engineer Arthur Vierendeel, who developed the design
in 1896. Its use for bridges is rare due to higher costs compared
to a triangulated truss.

• This is preferable to a braced-frame system, which would leave


some areas obstructed by the diagonal braces.

94
VIERENDEEL TRUSS APPLICATION

Konsol Uygulaması

Seattle, Washington, USA

95
SPACE TRUSSES

• Generally square inverted pyramid


modules connected at the top and bottom
layers provide the most commonly used
Space Frame structures. Pipes, spherical
node, cone, bolt and sleeve are the
common components.
• There are various types of connection
nodes patented by various companies in
the world.
• Two popular nodes are solid spherical
nodes per Mero system Germany and
hollow spherical node per Unibat.

96
GALATASARAY STADIUM,ISTANBUL

Steel, span 228 m

97
SABIHA GOKCEN AIRPORT,
ISTANBUL

Arch form steel truss system, span 272m

98
BOX GIRDER

Bridge box girder

99
DOUBLE TEE FLOOR SLABS

Precast Structure,Span 39.00 m

100
RESTAURANT AT XOCHIMILCO
MEXICO CITY
• The intersecting hyperparabaloids of Felix
Candela's restaurant at Xochimilco,
Mexico City.
• You can see from the diagram above how
the structure is formed from the 'saddle'
shape of the 'hypars.' The 'hypar' structure
means the seemingly complex curves can
all be constructed using straight lines, as
the diagram above also helps to
demonstrate.
• Candela's ingenuity here means the visible
'free edges' of the concrete shell are as
thin as just forty millimeters.

101
SHELL STRUCTURES

Hypar roof, Court House Square.


Hypar shells, near San Francisco,
Designed to house a shop, Denver,
USA.
USA.

102
SHELL STRUCTURES

Olimpic Stadium, Rome, Italy


Luigi Nervi

103
SHELL STRUCTURES

Australia, Sydney Opera House

104
DOMES

A type of a Schwedler dome.

105
PURE ENGINEERED STRUCTURES

106
THE SUPER DOME LOUISIANA, USA

107
TGC STATION AT THE AIRPORT OF LYON,
FRANCE

108
CLASSIFICATION ACCORDING TO
SPAN

• Small Span Bridges (up to 15m)


• Medium Span Bridges (up to 50m)
• Large Span Bridges (50-150m)
• Extra Large ( Long ) Span Bridges
(over 150m)

109
COALBROOKDALE BRIDGE, UK

110
LUPU BRIDGE, SHANGHAI,CHINA

• The Lupu Bridge of Shanghai is the longest


steel arch bridge in the world. Its 550-
meter-long arch span is 32 meters longer
than that of the New River Gorge Bridge in
the US state of West Virginia.
• With 2.2 billion yuan (US$266 million) of
investment. A six lane bridge Construction
began in October 2000 and it was
completed in June 2002.
• Similar to the Sydney Harbour Bridge, the
Lupu Bridge also functions as a sightseeing
attraction.

111
FATIH SULTAN MEHMET BRIDGE, ISTANBUL,
TURKIYE

Suspension Bridge, Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, 1510 m span, 64 m


height, finished 1988.

112
ALAMILLO BRIDGE SEVILLE, SPAIN

Alamillo Bridge, 1987-92 Seville, Spain Calatrava

113
A CANTILEVER BRIDGE
• A cantilever bridge is a bridge built using cantilevers, structures that project horizontally into
space, supported on only one end. For small footbridges, the cantilevers may be
simple beams; however, large cantilever bridges designed to handle road or rail traffic
use trusses built from structural steel, or box girders built from prestressed concrete. The
steel truss cantilever bridge was a major engineering breakthrough when first put into
practice, as it can span distances of 460 m, and can be more easily constructed at difficult
crossings by virtue of using little or no falsework.

115
THE PIERRE PFLIMLIN BRIDGE,
FRANCE-GERMANY

The Pierre Pflimlin bridge being constructed over the river Rhine between Germany and
France. Photo of the eastern pylon, taken from the French side of the river (southwest,
Eschau), with the cantilever construction almost 2/3rds of the maximum length. Visible
behind the bridge is the approach viaduct and a cement works on the German side
(Altenheim).

116
117
APPENDIX
HOW FAR CAN I SPAN ?

119
HOW FAR CAN I SPAN ?

120
STEEL BEAM AND COLUMN SECTIONS

121
CONNECTION DETAILS

122
STRUCTURAL ARRAGEMENTS FOR
MULTI-STOREY FRAME STRUCTURES

123
COMPOSITE FLOOR DETAILS

124
FUNDAMENTAL CONCEPTS
• Units • Engineering Concepts
– Length – need to know position – Idealizations – all real problems
and geometry of objects
– Time – need to determine simplified to some degree
are
succession of events – Particle – mass acting is if it were
– Mass – related to amount of concentrated at a singe point
stuff in a body, found using – Rigid Body – particle collection in a
gravitational attraction
– Weight – force due to gravity shape that doesn’t change with applied
acting on a mass, W=mg, where force
g=9.8m/s2 – Concentrated Force – force acting as if it
• Basic Quantities were at a single point
– Force – push or pull on a body,
can be direct (contact) or • Newton’s Laws
indirect (no contact) – Newton’s First Law – bodies in motion
– Moment – turning effect caused (or at rest) stay in motion (or at rest)
by a force applied at some unless acted on by an unbalance force
distance away from the axis of
rotation – Newton’s Second Law – F=ma
– Newton’s Third Law – every action has
an equal and opposite reaction

125
REFERENCES
➢ West, H., (1993) Fundamentals of Structural Analysis, John Wiley &Sons, Inc..
➢ Sebestyen, G., (2003 ) New Architecture and Technology, Architectural Press.
➢ Engel, H., (1968) Structure Systems, Iliffe Books, London.
➢ Eugenkurrer, K., (2010) The History of the Theory of Structures From Arch Analysis to Computational Mechanics, 2008 Ernst & Sohn
Verlag fur Architektur und technische Wissenschaften GmbH & .Co. KG, Berlin.
➢ Ahuja, A., (1997) Integrated M/E Design: Building Systems Engineering, Chapman & Hall.
➢ Chilton, J., (2000) Space Grid Structures, Architectural Press, Butterworth.
➢ Karni, E., (2000) Structural-Geometrical Performance of Wide-Span Space Structures, Architectural Science Review, 43.2, June.
➢ Beedle, L., (Ed.-in-Chief) and Armstrong, Paul J. (Ed.) (1995) Architecture of Tall Buildings, McGraw-Hill, Inc.
➢ Wahl, I., (2007) Building Anatomy, McGraw-Hill,Construction.
➢ Ali and Moon, K.S., (2007) Structural Developments in Tall Buildings: Current Trends and Future Prospects, Architectural Science
Review Volume 50.3, pp 205-223.
• Buyukozturk, O., (2004) High-Rise Buildings: Evolution and Innovations, Keynote Lecture, CIB2004 World Building Congress, Toronto,
Ontario Canada.
➢ http://www.structuremag.org
➢ http://en.structurae.de
➢ http://www.celebratingeqsafety.com/
➢ http://www.thefunctionality.com
➢ http://www.2doworld.com
➢ http://nisee.berkeley.edu/godden/
➢ Various websites from which images have been extracted.

126
TÄNAN VÄGA
THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR
YOUR
ATTENTION
ISTANBUL KÜ LTÜ R UNIVERSITY, ENGINEERING FACULTY
CIVIL ENGINEERING DEPARTMENT
e.coskun@iku.edu.tr

127

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