Introduction

Structural systems are those elements of construction that are designed to form part of a building’s structure either to support the entire building (or another built asset, such as a bridge or tunnel) or just a part of it. So, a steel frame is a structural system that supports the building and everything on it and in it. A space frame is a structural system that typically supports the roof.

Types of structural system

Continuous structures

These comprise continuous supporting walls through which the combined loads and forces in a building are transferred, mainly by direct compression, into the subsoil through the foundations. The timber floors of a traditional brick-built house, for example, provide lateral bracing and prevent potential deflection of the walls. Laying the bricks in a bond pattern (ie with staggered vertical joints) allows compression forces to be evenly distributed throughout the wall volume.

Framed structures

Timber, reinforced concrete, and steel can all be used to create regular frameworks comprising beams and columns. The beams transfer loads from the roof, floors, and walls to the columns. The columns transfer the beam loads to the sub-soil through the foundations. The dead and imposed loads from roofs or floor slabs will be transferred to the floor beams and then to the structural frame. Compared to a continuous support-type structure of similar weight, a framed structure typically transfers more concentrated loads into the subsoil.

External walls in framed buildings act as infill panels between columns and beams. Because they are non-load bearing (although they carry their own weight and must resist wind forces), they can be of any durable material that fulfills thermal, acoustic, fire, and environmental criteria. When positioned on the outside of the frame they form a part of the building envelope and are known as cladding. When they are positioned on a secondary steel framework attached to the outside of the main structure so that a ventilation gap is created behind them, they are known as a rainscreen.

The position of the structural frame relative to its cladding will determine the external appearance: cladding panels can be located behind, in front of, or flush with the frame.

Shell structures

Shell structures are made from structural ‘skins’ where the shell material is thin in section relative to the other dimensions of the roof and undergoes relatively little deformation under load. They are commonly used where a building interior needs to be free from intermediate walls or columns that might support a more conventional flat or pitched roof, such as; libraries, theatres, leisure centers, airport and railway terminals, and so on.

Shell roofs structures are ‘flat’, but are typically curved, assuming a cylindrical, domed, paraboloid, or ellipsoid shape. The curvature of shell structures benefits from the same structural efficiency as arches, which are pure compression forms with no tensile stresses. Because of their structural efficiency, less material is generally needed compared to more traditional roofs. However, a restraining structure such as an edge beam is required to prevent the shell from ‘spreading’.

Tensile structures

Conventional structures tend to be stabilized by the action of gravity on their mass holding them in compression. A tensile structure is a structure that is stabilized by tension rather than compression. In practice, structures tend to carry both tension and compression, and it is the degree to which a structure is intentionally tensioned to stabilize it that determines whether it is considered a tensile structure.

A suspension bridge is an example of a tensile structure.

Membrane structures

Membrane structures (or fabric structures) create spaces that are enclosed by tensioned membranes. At its simplest, a tent may be regarded as a membrane structure given its steel or fiberglass poles support a canvas or plastic membrane covering.

As structures, membranes can be divided into pneumatic structures, tensile membrane structures, and cable net membrane structures. In all these, the membrane is rendered taut through tensile forces applied by steel cables (or internal air pressure) which transfer the forces to a structural frame and then to the subsoil. It is through the action of the cables and construction members that the membranes find their form.

In inflatable structures, steel cables and columns are replaced by air which supports a reinforced membrane.

Any Other Design In Your Mind.