How to Design a Simple Two Floor Office Building with a Roof?

AI Thread Summary
To design a simple two-floor office building with a roof, start by determining the static loads, including the weight of the roof, which is crucial for supporting the upper floors. Specify the types of beams, floor slabs, and columns needed for structural integrity. It is suggested to begin the design from the roof downwards to accurately calculate the necessary support for each level. Assumptions about additional loads, such as snow, should be clarified, but if no information is provided, it is acceptable to assume none. Understanding the material strengths and load calculations is essential for a successful design.
chiku18
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hello everyone

i have to design a simple two floor office building with roof.
i am very lost and confused and don't know where to start from.
can someone help?pleaseeee

concrete1page.jpg
 
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chiku18 said:
hello everyone

i have to design a simple two floor office building with roof.
i am very lost and confused and don't know where to start from.
can someone help?pleaseeee

View attachment 41836

This looks like a static load and strengths of materials problem. You need to specify the type of beam foundation, floor slabs, exterior and internal columns, and roof to be self supporting for static loads only.

Define your roof and floors, calculate weights, If needed, define support beams to support roof and floors, then design columns to support those loads, then define foundation beams to support the full structure.

Hope that helps or somebody with more civil structural background can chime in. It also might help if you would tell us what level of education, statics, materials and math background you are working with.
 
chiku18 said:
i am very lost and confused and don't know where to start from.

Start at the roof and work downwards. You can't design the top floor till you know the weight of the roof it has to support.
 
AlephZero said:
Start at the roof and work downwards. You can't design the top floor till you know the weight of the roof it has to support.

That is more clear than what I wrote. Based on the nodaliztion in the drawing woud you agree that the design probably includes two internal columns on each floor?
 
NUCENG said:
That is more clear than what I wrote. Based on the nodaliztion in the drawing woud you agree that the design probably includes two internal columns on each floor?

yes i agree but how would i find the weight of full roof?
no load is given i can find the dead load

DL=150 lb/ft^3 x cross section

but i can't because its roof...should i just assume snow load?
 
Last edited:
NUCENG said:
That is more clear than what I wrote. Based on the nodaliztion in the drawing woud you agree that the design probably includes two internal columns on each floor?

u mean like this?

1.png
 
chiku18 said:
yes i agree but how would i find the weight of full roof?
no load is given i can find the dead load

DL=150 lb/ft^3 x cross section

but i can't because its roof...should i just assume snow load?

chiku18 said:
u mean like this?

View attachment 41864

No information in the problem definition about snow load so assume none.

Yes
 

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