Wind Stresses in Multi-Storey Buildings. A Simple Solution Within Safe Limits

Author: Baker, A L L

Date published

N/A

Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

Back to Previous

Wind Stresses in Multi-Storey Buildings. A Simple Solution Within Safe Limits

Tag
Author
Baker, A L L
Date published
N/A
Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The Structural Engineer
Author

Baker, A L L

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 26, Issue 6, 1948

Date published

N/A

Author

Baker, A L L

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 26, Issue 6, 1948

Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The possibility of multi-storey buildings being constructed in the near future with light pre-fabricated internal partitions makes it important to ensure that wind stresses are correctly calculated. The American practice of assuming the points of contraflexure in the stanchions to be mid-way between the floors can involve serious errors and the continental practice of using three member equations is a little too laborious in the case of high buildings.

Professor A.L.L. Baker

Additional information

Format:
PDF
Publisher:
The Institution of Structural Engineers

Tags

Issue 6

Related Resources & Events

The Structural Engineer
<h4>Wind Stresses in Multi-Storey Buildings. An Extension of Professor A.L.L. Baker's Safe Limit Solutio</h4>

Wind Stresses in Multi-Storey Buildings. An Extension of Professor A.L.L. Baker's Safe Limit Solutio

Professor A. L. L,. Baker, in his simple solution for wind stresses in multi-storey buildings, aims at defining the limits in any stanchion within which the point of contraflexure must lie. This enables safe estimates to be made or bending moments due to wind load in both stanchions and beams. The theory is based upon the analysis of a single bay multistorey frame with equal storey heights and equal beams, and would only apply strictly to such a building. The solution also assumes that the joints are completely rigid. However, the extreme ease with which the theory may be applied when only the barest outline of the design is settled makes it attractive, and prompts investigation into what happens when the conditions laid down in the simple analysis are not satisfied. M.R. Horne

Price – £10
The Structural Engineer
<h4>The Notched-Bar Test</h4>

The Notched-Bar Test

A typescript copy of this paper (3,000 words with two tables and four figures) is available in the Library of the Institution. The paper is revolutionary in its views of the fundamentals of the strength of steel. A.C. Vivian

Price – £10
The Structural Engineer
<h4>The Loyal Address Presented to their Majesties on the Occasion of their Silver Wedding</h4>

The Loyal Address Presented to their Majesties on the Occasion of their Silver Wedding

We, the Council of the Chartered Institution of Structural Engineers, on our own behalf and that of the members of the Institution desire humbly to tender our most sincere and heartfelt congratulations on the occasion of the Twenty-fifth Anniversary of the Marriage of your Gracious Majesty and her Majesty Queen Elizabeth.

Price – £10