Title: Common%20Commercial%20Construction%20Materials
1Chapter 45
- Common Commercial Construction Materials
2Links for Chapter 45
Wood
Steel Construction
Concrete Block
Common Connectors
Poured Concrete
Related Web Sites
3Wood
- Platform construction is similar to residential
construction - Walls are framed the same but require a different
finish to obtain a specific fire rating - Roof trusses or joists are 24 to 36 o.c.
- Purlins are smaller beams placed between larger
beams
4Wood
5Wood
- Heavy timber includes members 5 X 5 up to 12 X
12 - Used for appearance and structural reasons
- Excellent fire-rating
- Represent posts with lines similar to the walls
- Represent beams with dashed lines
- Use text to note both beams and posts
6Wood
7Wood
- Laminated beams are smaller members glued
together for a stronger beam - Used in open areas like churches and gyms
- Single-span beams are used in standard platform
framing - Tudor and three-hinged arch members are a
post-and-beam system combined
8Wood
- Beams are represented in four different ways
9Concrete Block
- Concrete blocks are durable and relatively
inexpensive to maintain and install - Manufactured in 8 X 8 X 16 modules
- Actual block is smaller to allow for mortar
- Walls even numbered should end in 0 or 8
- Walls odd numbered long should end in 4
10Concrete Block
- Bold lines represent edges of the masonry
- Thin lines represent hatching the edge of the
wall at 45 - Dimension the size and location of blocks on the
floor plan - Pilasters are thick parts of the foundation used
to carry heavier loads
11Concrete Block
12Concrete Block
- Steel reinforcement, called rebar, improves
resistance to tension forces - Rebar ranges from 3/8 to 1 3/8 diameter and is
deformed or smooth
13Concrete Block
- Steel is centered in the wall cavity
- Specify the quantity of bars, size, direction,
and grade - Steel is not drawn in floor plan
14Poured Concrete
- Concrete is made of sand and gravel bonded with
cement and water - Steel reinforcement is used inside a form
- Forms are used to pour concrete into
- Show sizes and steel placement on the drawing
- Floors are usually reinforced poured concrete
15Poured Concrete
16Poured Concrete
- Walls or other components are formed off site and
transported to the job site - Sections are joined with a metal flange
- Prestressed concrete has cables placed in them
and they are pulled before the concrete hardens
17Poured Concrete
18Poured Concrete
- Tilt-up is a method of using preformed wall
panels which are lifted in place - Concrete is poured around the steel
19Steel Construction
- Steel studs meet requirements for Type 1, 2, and
3 construction methods - Designed for rapid assembly
- Lightweight, noncombustible, and strong
- Range in size from 3 5/8 to 10
- Produced with 12 to 20 gage steel
- Specify as 362SJ20 STEEL STUDS BY UNIMAST
20Steel Construction
- Steel joists offer the same advantages over wood
as steel studs - Nested joists are placed around another joist
- Available in lengths up to 40
- Can support greater loads over longer spans
- Specify as14K4 OPEN WEB STEEL JOIST_at_32 O.C.
21Steel Construction
- Corrugated steel decking is used for lightweight
floors - Steel decking is attached to the floor or roof
with screws or welds
22Steel Construction
- Prefabricated steel structures are built in
modular units with given spans, wall heights, and
lengths - Tapered members allow a minimum amount of
material to be used - Metal siding is screwed to girts to complete the
wall
23Steel Construction
- The Manual of Steel Construction (AISC) is the
code book for steel construction
24Steel Construction
- Steel is specified as a plate, bar, or a shape
- Specify sizes, steel type, and other information
on drawings - Joints for steel construction are either welded
or bolted
25Common Connection Methods
- Nails are common connectors for wood less than 1
1/2 thick - Must penetrate a connecting member by half of its
thickness - Nails are common, deformed, box, and spikes
- Measured as a penny (d)
- Specify as 2 X 6 DFL SILL W/20ds_at_4 O.C.
26Common Connection Methods
- Nailing is determined by how accessible the nail
head is during construction - Face Nailing - Nail is driven through face of one
board into face of another - End Nailing - Nail goes through face of one board
into then end of another
27Common Connection Methods
- Nail placing methods
- Toe Nailing - Nails are driven through faces and
are at 90 to each other - Blind Nailing - Nails are not seen such as in
flooring materials - Edge, field, and boundary nailing refer to the
placement of nails on the sheathing
28Common ConnectionMethods
29Common Connection Methods
- Staples are used connecting asphalt roofing
materials - Power-driven studs are used to anchor wood or
metal to masonry members
30Common Connection Methods
- Screws are twisted into the material and are
resistant to withdrawal - Flathead, roundhead, and lag screws are most
common - Specify the diameter, length, type, and if
washers are used
31Common Connection Methods
32Common Connection Methods
- Metal framing connectors are used to strengthen
nailed connections - Specify on plans by listing model number and type
of connector - Nails or bolts are used with the metal fastener
for extra support
33Common Connection Methods
34Common Connection Methods
- Bolts include anchor, machine, and carriage
- Anchor bolts are L-shaped and are inserted into
the concrete to hold lumber down - Machine bolts are used to attach steel and wood
members - Carriage bolts connect steel to other metal
members
35Common Connection Methods
- Other bolts include stud, drift, expansion and
toggle - Washers keep the bolt head and nut from pulling
through the wood
36Common Connection Methods
37Common Connection Methods
- Welding provides a rigid connection between
pieces of steel - Welded pieces become one
- Welding is stronger, greater resistance to shear
or rotational forces, and can support greater
loads - Specify welds with a symbol and notation
38Common Connection Methods
39Common Connection Methods
- Fillet welds are formed in the internal corner of
two pieces of steel - Square groove weld is used when the steel edges
are perpendicular and joined end to end - V-groove weld is when the steel forms a V shape
40Common Connection Methods
- Beveled weld is when one piece of steel has a
beveled edge - U-groove weld is when two mating pieces form a U
- J-groove weld is when one piece has a
perpendicular edge and the other has a curved
grooved edge
41Common Connection Methods
42Common Connection Methods
43Related Web Sites
- American Institute of Steel Construction -
www.aisc.org - American Institute of Timber Construction -
www.aitc-glulam.org - American Welding Society - www.aws.org
- Concrete Reinforcing Steel Institute -
www.crsi.org - Steel Joist Institute - www.steeljoist.org