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Manual offers guidance to engineers challenged by historic load-bearing structures

By Charles Guidry

National Cathedral vibration tests

Long before the advent of standardized building codes, architects were tackling complicated structural elements like arches, domes and buttresses. While today's architects and engineers marvel at the endurance of these historic features, awe sometimes turns to frustration when faced with restoring them-especially those that are load-bearing.

The struggle with load-bearing buildings that have high ceilings and no central support is amplified by the lack of technical guidance on the subject. As a result, these structures are in danger of being restored improperly or replaced.

Using a PTT Grant, Thomas Boothby and his research team from Pennsylvania State University studied structural modeling to assess load-bearing masonry structures and developed a manual to demystify these structures for architects and engineers.

Hydraulic Displacement

"A structural engineer is usually confronted with a standing, apparently competent, structure that seems to defy most of the rules of structural behavior, as incorporated in modern building codes," Boothby said, "The engineer must then choose between reinforcing the structure according to a modern understanding of material strength and structural behavior or trying to make sense of the behavior and anticipated strength of the structure on a more fundamental level."

The study used a testing procedure called experimental modal analysis (EMA). Using response transducers and signal processing techniques, EMA can describe a structure in terms of its dynamic characteristics, such as damping ratios, natural frequencies and mode shapes.

The project team conducted detailed assessment studies on four major early twentieth-century buildings: the National Cathedral in Washington, D.C.; the Cathedral of St. John the Divine in New York; the State Education Building in Albany, N.Y.; and the City-County Building in Pittsburgh. In each of these studies experiments were conducted on a key portion of the building and used to verify the accuracy of a diagnostic model.

The manual resulting from this research describes the application of different methods to the structural assessment of two different types of structures: two-dimensional arch structures and three-dimensional vault structures. It also gives guidance for the application of frame analysis programs to linear and non-linear assessment of masonry arches and provides detailed instructions for the development of solid models, meshing, entering material properties, boundary conditions, and loads for models of complex three-dimensional structures, such as domes and vaults.

"We sincerely hope we have provided information that will assist consulting engineers in making appropriate decisions regarding these structures," Boothby said. "Since the engineering profession is driven by safety, there is a tendency to reinforce what we don't understand. When the inherent strength of load-bearing masonry can be understood, it is easier to undertake appropriate treatments for historic properties made with this material."

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Updated: Wednesday, October 24, 2007
Published: Sunday, January 11, 2009


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