Bracing is Beautiful!
Heads up for all the building designers out there... Bracing is Beautiful!

There are very few building systems as cheap and efficient as braced frames. Allowing your engineers to put just a few braces in the building will make them a very happy person. You'll see a lower cost per sq. ft of building, use less material, and make a green statement. Moment frames open up the floor areas, but you sacrifice a lot of room for the deeper beams, bigger columns, and tricky connections.
The most important reason to consider bracing is that people love seeing structure expressed in their buildings. It worked for the Hancock Center in Chicago, and it can work for you! There are buildings and architectural styles that it won't work for, but you can hide the braces pretty easily.
There are many flavors of bracing. Concentric, eccentric, chevron, knee, buckling restrained braces, multi-story bracing, etc. Just put those terms into an image search and you'll see a world of options waiting for you.

If you are concerned about exposed steel members (fire resistance, corrosion, vandalism) then you may want to coordinate with a specialist during your initial design. If appearance is a concern, then I strongly recommend you consider some of the newer imported components available. For smaller loads, a pin-connected rod from StaLok will work, whereas for a Cast Connex bracing component can handle even large bracing forces seen in high seismic areas.

We all want to do our part to help the owners get the building they want - at a reasonable cost with great performance. I think recommending a bracing system is a great way for engineers to add value to the project, without the high initial cost of shearwalls or moment frames.

There are very few building systems as cheap and efficient as braced frames. Allowing your engineers to put just a few braces in the building will make them a very happy person. You'll see a lower cost per sq. ft of building, use less material, and make a green statement. Moment frames open up the floor areas, but you sacrifice a lot of room for the deeper beams, bigger columns, and tricky connections.
The most important reason to consider bracing is that people love seeing structure expressed in their buildings. It worked for the Hancock Center in Chicago, and it can work for you! There are buildings and architectural styles that it won't work for, but you can hide the braces pretty easily.
There are many flavors of bracing. Concentric, eccentric, chevron, knee, buckling restrained braces, multi-story bracing, etc. Just put those terms into an image search and you'll see a world of options waiting for you.

If you are concerned about exposed steel members (fire resistance, corrosion, vandalism) then you may want to coordinate with a specialist during your initial design. If appearance is a concern, then I strongly recommend you consider some of the newer imported components available. For smaller loads, a pin-connected rod from StaLok will work, whereas for a Cast Connex bracing component can handle even large bracing forces seen in high seismic areas.

We all want to do our part to help the owners get the building they want - at a reasonable cost with great performance. I think recommending a bracing system is a great way for engineers to add value to the project, without the high initial cost of shearwalls or moment frames.
Labels: innovation, resources, seismic, structural engineering, Urban Environment


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