Aluminum Bibliography
Aluminum Standards and Data, Engineering Data for Aluminum Structures, Designation Systems for Aluminum Finishes, and Specifications for Aluminum Structures, The Aluminum Association, […]
Sociological changes, new technology in industry and commerce, new building codes, other new laws and regulations, inflationary economies of nations, and advances in building technology place an ever-increasing burden on building designers
and constructors. They need more and more knowledge and skill to cope with the demands placed on them.
The public continually demands more complex buildings than in the past. They must serve more purposes, last longer, and require less maintenance and repair. As in the past, they must look attractive. Yet, both building construction and operating
costs must be kept within acceptable limits or new construction will cease.
To meet this challenge successfully, continual improvements in building design and construction must be made. Building designers and constructors should be alert to these advances and learn how to apply them skillfully.
One advance of note to building design is the adaptation of operations research, or systems design, developed around the middle of the twentieth century and originally
applied with noteworthy results to design of machines and electronic equipment.
In the past, design of a new building was mainly an imitation of the design of an existing building. Innovations were often developed fortuitously and by intuition and were rare occurrences. In contrast, systems design encourages innovation.
It is a precise procedure that guides creativity toward the best decisions. As a result, it can play a significant role in meeting the challenges posed by increasing building complexity and costs. The basic principles of systems design are presented
in this section.
Aluminum Standards and Data, Engineering Data for Aluminum Structures, Designation Systems for Aluminum Finishes, and Specifications for Aluminum Structures, The Aluminum Association, […]
The ACI 318 Building Code permits an approximate analysis for continuous systems in ordinary building if: Components are not prestressed. Beams
Nonprestressed, reinforced-concrete flexural members (Art. 9.63) may be designed for flexure by the alternative design method of the ACI 318 Building
Allowable-Stress Design at Service Loads (Alternative Design Method) Read Post »
Structural strength, fire resistance, crack control, and deflections of one-way slabs must be satisfactory under service loads. Strength and Deflections. Approximate
The flat plate is the simplest form of two-way slab simplest for analysis, design, detailing, bar fabrication and placing, and formwork.
Any change in flow of current, such as that which occurs in alternating current, produces a magnetic field around the wire.
A true membrane is able to withstand tension but is completely unable to resist bending. Although it is highly efficient structurally,
At service loads and up to cracking loads, straight-line theory may be used for computing stresses in prestressed beams with the