Review of Lab 6
    An exercise in structural form

    Arch 324/624, Introduction to Structural Design, University of Virginia
    Copyright © 1996-2006 Kirk Martini. Last Modified Fri, 01-Jun-2007 15:31
      

    • In Lab 6, you discovered one reason why trusses are used rather than beams

      • Some situations call for more depth than a beam can easily provide.

      • A truss allows a strong and stiff structure to be built from relatively small components.

    • The problem also highlighted some important aspects of design

      • Design is a process of search within a constrained space.

      • Design is iterative and cyclic, not linear and direct.

      • Some things just don't work.

    • The problem had good and bad points:

      • Good: Allows broad exploration of design space, focussing on behavior rather than calculation details.

      • Bad: The problem was pure model manipulation without any sense of a real structure and how it would be detailed for construction braced in three dimensions, or how the structure would look in an architectural context. It was a "stress invaders" video game.

      • Good: The problem allowed you to discover why trusses are used, and how to look carefully at the assumptions and constraints of a problem.

      • Bad: The constraints were very incomplete, since they did not include checking the strength of the members, particularly buckling.

      • Good: The problem offers an opportunity to show the value of back-of-an-envelope calculations to make decisions about overall form. We'll look at this.

    A few solutions.


    22.3 K


    18 K


    12.1 K


    9.8 K


    8.6 K


    7.8 K

    Arch 324/624, Introduction to Structural Design, University of Virginia
    Copyright © 1996-2005 Kirk Martini. Last Modified Fri, 01-Jun-2007 15:31