Frame Structures 2
Frame Structures 2
Frame
A frame is a basic structure designed to bear a load in a
lightweight economical manner.
Frame Structure
Cast Iron
Steel
Aluminum
Concrete
Wood
Fiber-Reinforced Plastics
Types of Frame Structure
and walls of a building which are all attached to the frame. The
skyscraper possible.
Advantages
High quality and for aesthetics
Low maintenance costs
Non combustible
Components can be re-used
Components are functional
Strong, durable and stable
Enables good design and safety
Sustainable to temperature effects
Rigid and dimensionally stable
Construction is fast compared to other materials
Disadvantages
wood
Fire safety
Types of Construction of Steel
Frames
Non-rigid Frame
Semi-rigid Frame
Fully-rigid Frame
1) NON – RIGID FRAME
3) FULLY-RIGID FRAME
A Fully – Rigid Frame is one in which all the joints are rigid
(held together in some way, so they won’t move).
In-situ, R.C.C frames are commonly constructed in this manner.
Types of Steel Frame
Structure
Skeleton Frame
Simplicity of connections.
beams.
3) Pin Jointed Structures
load.
Saving cost construction
technique.
Wind Bracing
The connections of beams to columns in multi-storey
RACK :
flower boxes.
This was the birth of
reinforced concrete.
Joseph Monier
First reinforced concrete
framed building was the
General Post Office in
London, completed in 1910.
Great shortage of steel that
follows the end of the Second
World War prompted
engineers to use reinforced
concrete.
moisture changes.
Disadvantages
Less facilities of casting.
Transportation problems.
Major problem is the joining of the members on site as
highly skilled labour is required.
R.C.C Walls
Types of Walls
Veneer wall
Party wall
Fire wall
Partition wall/Curtain Wall
Cantilever/unsupported wall
Load bearing wall
Non –load bearing wall
Exterior Wall
Definitions
Veneer Wall
Decorative walls usually attached to the outside of load-
bearing frame construction
Party Wall
Load bearing wall that supports two adjacent structures
Fire Wall
Separates two structures or divides a structure into smaller
portions to prevent spread of fires
Partition Wall
Non-load bearing wall that divides two areas within a
structure
Cantilever/Unsupported Walls
Freestanding wall usually found in shopping centers or
churches
Load bearing Wall
That supports loads from floors, roof and equipment plus
their own weight
Non-load bearing Wall
Interior wall, used to separate two rooms in a house/office
& only support their own weight
Pre-stressed Concrete
In standard reinforced concrete, the
surface of the concrete that is in tension
should always be expected to crack. Tension
will cause the steel to lengthen slightly.
However, as the concrete is weak in tension,
it will crack rather than stretch.
Pre-stressed concrete changes the areas
of concrete that are normally in tension into
areas of compression.
This is done by bonding or attaching the
concrete to steel that is under significant
tension. The tensioned steel ‘squeezes’ the
concrete so much that the entire concrete
section is under compression and is,
therefore, less likely to crack.
Earthquake Tips
Build floors with light materials like timber, plywood and
clipboard with bolts firmly attached to the steel beam.
The use of glass, bricks and hollow blocks should be
minimized while building .
Tie walls, floors, roofs and foundations to a rigid box of steel.
This is based on the fact that earthquake exerts sideways load on
buildings.
In apartment buildings, concrete panels should be setup both
horizontally and vertically to surrounding rooms in the building.
These panels hold the structure and conserve its firmness.