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Structural Calculations

par Sagar Joshi
Structural calculations help engineers determine the resources needed to complete work. Read on to learn about the benefits and structural calculations.

What are structural calculations?

Structural calculations determine the potential costs and highlight the risks associated with a project. They look at every possible construction aspect, including walls, foundations, and other structures. 

Anyone planning a new project will need a structural calculations report that complies with building permit requirements. It helps prove a building is fit for use. 

Contractors use it on the working site to detect and discuss construction challenges before the project starts. For example, a design proposes the elimination of a wall. A contractor can quickly check if it’s load-bearing. If so, removing the wall would not be simple, and he could devise an alternative solution. It saves the team time, money, and effort in the long run.

Many contractors and building engineers leverage civil engineering design software to visualize the structure and make reliable calculations. 

Benefits of structural calculations

Structural calculation is vital to a construction project's safety, efficiency, and success. It provides a scientific basis for design decisions and contributes to cost-effective and sustainable construction practices. Below are some of its notable benefits.

  • Safety assurance: These calculations help identify weak points and any possible failures and ensure that a structure can withstand loads and forces without compromising safety.
  • Compliance with codes and standards: Structural calculations ensure that a structure's design and construction follow relevant building codes and standards. 
  • Optimize material use: Structural engineers optimize material usage by calculating the minimum required sizes and quantities to meet safety and performance criteria.
  • Efficient design: Engineers use structural calculations to refine the design by identifying the most efficient configurations. 
  • Mitigating risks: Structural calculations encourage the early analysis and assessment of potential risks. 
  • Performance prediction: Structures perform differently under different loading conditions. With structural calculations, engineers can predict these variations and design accordingly.

Key elements of a structural calculation report

A structural calculation report is an essential part of the design process. Structural engineers look into various elements while creating this report, including:

  • Load calculations: This involves calculating the forces that will act on a structure. Common types of structural loads include dead loads, live loads, wind loads, snow loads, seismic loads, and more. Dead loads are the permanent or static loads on a structure. Live loads are temporary or dynamic loads like the weight of occupants and furniture. Wind loads are the forces exerted by wind on a structure.
  • Analysis of the structure: A structural engineer examines the structural design to ensure stability and to check whether the structure can withstand the loads it’s exposed to.
  • Material calculations: The size and strength of all the materials needed for a structure are determined through material calculations. It includes material properties such as concrete, steel, and wood.
  • Building regulations compliance: Checks to determine if the design complies with regional building regulations and ensures the safety of occupants are crucial to a structural calculation report. 
  • Foundation calculations: Measuring the size and depth of the foundations required to support a building’s weight is critical to ensure long-term stability. 
  • Environmental impact: A structural calculation report also checks whether a project affects its environment in the long run or during construction.

How structural calculations fit into the design process

An architect gives a structure its appearance and makes it function per the client's requirements. The design of a building includes several disciplines, and each step contributes a vital element to the process. 

  • Architectural planning is the primary stage of the design process. It allows the client to share their vision with an architect and communicate their intentions regarding the building's appearance, function, and cost. The architect then lays it all out in the form of drawings. 
  • Design structure includes calculating the expected loads on a design. In this step, engineers look closely into the stiffness and strength of the structure and assess what force it can resist without any deformation.
  • Permit requirements involve sending the design to the local building department for plan check review. Accurate structural calculations streamline the permit process. Most buildings require at least a demolition permit, grading permit, and building permit before construction begins. 

Structural calculations vs. structural analysis

Before a contractor undertakes a project, they perform detailed structural calculations to understand how the structure would behave during and after construction. 

Every home improvement project does not necessarily need a structural calculation report. However, owners might have to get a structural calculation done if the home improvement includes working on a basement or loft. They will also need a report for extensive home improvements, such as removing a load-bearing wall or a chimney. The homeowners are responsible for ensuring the engineer completes any structural calculations well before the work begins. 

Structural analysis determines the structure’s response under specified loads or a combination. The analysis process is performed by making assumptions. An engineer assumes the dimensions of all the structural elements, loads, material properties, and support conditions and then analyzes the design for all elements' strength, stability, and stiffness. 

For structural analysis, one must understand how structural elements behave. It needs engineers to be proficient in math, physics, and structural mechanics.

Learn more about finite element analysis to understand how structural objects interact with physical forces.

Sagar Joshi
SJ

Sagar Joshi

Sagar Joshi is a former content marketing specialist at G2 in India. He is an engineer with a keen interest in data analytics and cybersecurity. He writes about topics related to them. You can find him reading books, learning a new language, or playing pool in his free time.