STRUCTURAL DESIGN FOR ARCHITECTURE

(Ben Green) #1

Structural Design for Architecture


Fig. 3.2 Cross-section and details of Bage's Mill, Shrewsbury, England, 1796. This is a very early example of an iron-
frame industrial building. The floors consisted of brick jack-arches, topped by a non-structural filling, supported on a
skeleton framework of cast iron beams and columns. No walls were required in the interior. Columns were not provided
50 in the perimeter walls which were therefore of loadbearing masonry. [Illustration. Mitchell's History of Building]

Iron roof frames
Fireproof floors

Normal
column

Window

Special
column
machinery
shaft

columnsIron for

Special
column
for
machinery
shaft

Smallest
section
near top
and bottom
of column

Maximum at
ground floor
150mm/6 inches

Iron
column

Iron
tie-rod
Iron
beam

Swelling
at middle
of column

Brick
jack-arches

Iron
-column 2.6m
(8.5ft) high

Column
swells out
at middle

Floor,

Detail of
typical column
beam and
jack-arches

Typical column
100mm (4 inches)
across at
top and bottom
Floor.

Tie-rod Column top

for columnSocket

Skewback

Skewback Tie-rod for columnSocket

•Wall

SIDE VIEW

won

TOP VIEW

•Tapering flange

.Skewback

100 mm
5 inches

jack-archBrick

Floor
surface

10 metres

Iron
column

for columnSocket

Tie-rod

CUT-AWAY VIEW
showing iron frameand fireproof floor

Tapering
flange
Skewback

Fireproof
ceiling

Brick
wall

SECTION

BEAM SECTION

beamIron

5

5

0 5 10 15 20 25 30 feet

1 0

0
0

Underside
of iron
beam
COLUMN
SECTIONS
OF SOLID
CAST IRON
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