Space Truss
Space Truss
Space Truss
SPACE TRUSS:
SPACE TRUSSES ARE THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURES WITH LONGITUDINAL
MEMBERS CONNECTED AT THEIR ENDS BY HINGES ASSUMED TO BE FRICTIONLESS.
THE LOADS ON SPACE TRUSSES ARE APPLIED ONLY AT THE NODES OR JOINTS,
THUS THE SELF-WEIGHT IS ALLOCATED FOR EACH ELEMENT AT ITS TWO ENDS
JOINING OTHER ELEMENTS OF THE TRUSS.
THE CONDITIONS IMPOSED ON SPACE TRUSSES ARE CERTAINLY THE SAME AS
THOSE ON PLANE TRUSSES. ESSENTIALLY,
THE ONLY DIFFERENCE IN THE ANALYSIS OF SPACE TRUSSES COMPARED WITH
PLANE TRUSSES IS THAT AN ELEMENT OF A SPACE TRUSS HAS THREE NODAL
COORDINATES AT EACH NODE WHILE AN ELEMENT OF A PLANE TRUSS HAS ONLY
TWO.
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
SPACE GRID:
A SPACE FRAME IS A THREE-DIMENSIONAL FRAMEWORK FOR ENCLOSING SPACES
IN WHICH ALL MEMBERS ARE INTERCONNECTED AND ACT AS A SINGLE ENTITY.
A BENEFIT OF THIS TYPE OF STRUCTURE IS THAT VERY LARGE SPACES CAN BE
COVERED, UNINTERRUPTED BY SUPPORT FROM THE GROUND.
SPACE FRAME:
IN ARCHITECTURE AND STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING, A SPACE FRAME OR SPACE
STRUCTURE (3D TRUSS) IS A RIGID, LIGHTWEIGHT, TRUSS-LIKE STRUCTURE
CONSTRUCTED FROM INTERLOCKING STRUTS IN A GEOMETRIC PATTERN. SPACE
FRAMES CAN BE USED TO SPAN LARGE AREAS WITH FEW INTERIOR SUPPORTS.
LIKE THE TRUSS, A SPACE FRAME IS STRONG BECAUSE OF THE INHERENT RIGIDITY
OF THE TRIANGLE; FLEXING LOADS (BENDING MOMENTS) ARE TRANSMITTED
AS TENSION AND COMPRESSION LOADS ALONG THE LENGTH OF EACH STRUT.
MEMBER:
MEMBERS ARE AXIAL ELEMENTS WITH CIRCULAR OR RECTANGULAR
SECTIONS, ALL MEMBERS CAN ONLY RESIST TENSION OR COMPRESSION.
THE SPACE GRID IS BUILT OF RELATIVELY LONG TENSION MEMBERS AND
SHORT COMPRESSION MEMBERS. A TREND IS VERY NOTICEABLE IN WHICH
THE STRUCTURAL MEMBERS ARE LEFT EXPOSED AS A PART OF THE
ARCHITECTURAL EXPRESSION
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
JOINTS:
IN A SPACE FRAME, CONNECTING JOINTS PLAY AN IMPORTANTROLE, BOTH
FUNCTIONAL AND ESTHETIC, WHICH DERIVES FROM THEIR RATIONALITY
DURING CONSTRUCTION AND AFTER COMPLETION.
SINCE JOINTS HAVE A DECISIVE EFFECT ON THESTRENGTH AND STIFFNESS OF
THE STRUCTURE AND COMPOSE AROUND 20 TO 30 PERCENT OF THE TOTAL
WEIGHT, JOINT DESIGN IS CRITICAL TO SPACE FRAME ECONOMY AND SAFETY
.
TUBES:
NOTES: FOR SINGLE SPAN BUILDINGS LIKE SPORTS HALL DOUBLE-LAYER GRIDS CAN BE
SUPPORTED ON FOUR INTERMEDIATE COLUMNS IT IS MORE DESIRABLE TO LOCATE THEM
IN THE MIDDLE OF THE SIDES RATHER AT THE CORNERS OF THE BUILDING
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
INTERNAL GRID:
SYSTEM: MULTICOLUMN SUPPORT
NOTES: FOR BUILDINGS LIKE WORKSHOPS, USUALLY MULTISPAN COLUMNS IN THE FORM
OF GRIDS IT IS BEST TO DESIGN WITH OVETHANGS WHICH ARE TAKEN AS QUARTER TO
ONE THIRD OF THE MIDSPAN CORNER SUPPORTS SHOULD BE AVOIDED IF POSSIBLE, SINCE
THIS CAUSE LARGE FORCES IN THE EDGE CHORDS.
ALONG PERIMETER:
SYSTEM: PERIMETER SUPPORT
NOTES: SUPPORT ALONG PERIMETERS. THIS IS THE MOST COMMONLY USED SUPPORT
LOCATION. THE SUPPORTS OF DOUBLE-LAYER GRIDS MAY DIRECTLY REST ON THE
COLUMNS OR ON RING BEAMS CONNECTING THE COLUMNS OR EXTERIOR WALLS. CARE
SHOULD BE TAKEN THAT THE MODULE SIZE OF GRIDS SHOULD MATCH THE COLUMN
SPACING.
NOTES: SUPPORT ALONG PERIMETERS ON THREE SIDES AND FREE ON THE OTHER SIDE.
FOR BUILDINGS OF RECTANGULAR SHAPE IT IS NECESSARY TO HAVE ONE SIDE OPEN,
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
SUCH AS IN THE CASE OF AIRPLANE HANGAR OR FOR FUTURE EXTENSION. INSTEAD OF
ESTABLISHING THE SUPPORTING GIRDER OR TRUSS ON THE FREE SIDE , TRIPLE-LAYER
GRID CAN BE FORMED BY SIMPLY ADDING WIDTHS. FOR SHORTER SPANS THIS CAN ALSO
BE SOLVED BY INCREASING THE DEPTH OF THE DOUBLE-LAYER GRID .THE SECTIONAL
AREA OF THE MEMBERS ALONG THE FREE SIDE WILL INCREASE ACCORDINGLY.
INVERTED PERIMETERS:
SYSTEM: COLUMN ADDITION
NOTES: CARRY THE SPACE GRIDS DOWN TO THE COLOUM TOP BY AN INVERTED PYRAMID
GROUND EXTENSION:
SYSTEM: SPACE FRAME EXTERNSION
NOTES: THE INVERTED PYRAMIDS MAY BE EXTENDED DOWN TO THE GROUND. THE
SPREADING OUT OF THE CONCENTRATED COLUMN REACTION ON THE SPACE GRIDS
REDUCES THE MAXIMUM CHORD AND WEB MEMBER FORCES ADJACENT TO THE COLUMN
SUPPORTS AND REDUCES THE EFFEC- TIVE SPANS
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
VERTICAL STRUT:
SYSTEM: COLUMN ADDITION
NOTES: THE USE OF A VERTICAL STRUT ON COUMN TOPS ENABLES THE SPACE GRIDS TO
BE SUPPORTED ON TOP CHORDS, BUT THE VERTICAL STRUT AR THE CONNECTING JOINT
HAVE TO BE VERY STRONG
CROSSHEAD BEAMS:
SYSTEM: COLUMN ADDITION
NOTES: THE USE OF CROSSHEAD BEAMS ON COLUMN TOPS PRODUCES THE SAME EFFECT
AS THE INVERTED PYRAMIA BUT USUALLY COSTS MORE IN MATERIAL AND SPECIAL
FABRICATION.
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
THE SUBDIVISION OF THE SURFACE OF THE BRACED DOME CAN ALSO BE CARRIED
OUT USING THE FOLLOWING THREE METHODS. THE fiRST METHOD IS BASED ON THE
SURFACE OF REVOLUTION, AND THE fiRST SET OF LINES OF DIVISION ARE DRAWN
AS THE MERIDIONAL LINES FROM THE APEX. NEXT, CIRCUMFERENTIAL RINGS ARE
ADDED.
SPACE FRAME STRUCTURE
THIS RESULTS IN A RIBBED DOME AND FURTHER A SCHWEDLER DOME.
ALTERNATELY, THE INITIAL SET MAY BE TAKEN AS A SERIES OF SPIRAL ARCS,
RESULTING IN DIVIDING THE SURFACE INTO TRIANGULAR UNITS AS UNIFORM AS
POSSIBLE. THIS IS ACHIEVED BY DRAWING GREAT CIRCLES IN THREE DIRECTIONS
AS SHOWN IN THE CASE OF GRID DOME.
A NOTEWORTHY TYPE OF DIVISION OF A BRACED DOME IS THE PARALLEL
LAMELLA DOME, WHICH IS OBTAINED BY COMBINING THE fiRST AND SECOND
METHODS DESCRIBED ABOVE.
THE THIRD TYPE OF SUBDIVISION RESULTS FROM PROJECTING THE EDGES OF IN-
POLYHEDRA ONTO THE SPHERICAL SURFACE AND THEN INSCRIBING A
TRIANGULAR NETWORK OF RANDOM FREQUENCY INTO THIS BASIC GRID.
GEODESIC DOME REPRESENTS AN APPLICATION OF THIS METHOD, WITH THE BASIC
fiELD DERIVED FROM THE ISOSAHEDRON FURTHER SUBDIVIDED INTO
EQUILATERAL TRIANGLES.
EXAMPLE 1: INTERNATIONAL
THE PYRAMID HAS A HEIGHT OF 21.60 METRES AND THE SIDES OF THE BASE ARE 34
METRES LONG.
BASE SURFACE AREA IS 1000 SQ.MT.
ITS SURFACE IS COMPOSED OF 603 ROMBHUS-SHAPED PANES AND MORE THAN 70
TRIANGLES.
TECHNICAL DETAILS:
TECHNICALLY THE PYRAMID HAS BEEN DESIGNED BASED ON A METALLIC
STRUCTURE OF STAINLESS STEEL THAT SUPPORTS 675 RHOMBUS AND 118
TRIANGLES OF SPECIAL GLASS.
MATERIAL USED:
ALUMINIUM
EXAMPLE 2: NATIONAL
INTRODUCTION:
THE PERMANENT EXHIBITION COMPLEX IS DESIGNED TO FORM THE FOCUS OF 130
ACRES OF EXHIBITION GROUND DESIGNED BY RAJ REWAL IN NEW DELHI. THE
DESIGN WAS EVOLVED TO MEET THE CONSTRAINTS OF TIME, AVAILABILITY OF
MATERIALS AND LABOR, BUT ABOVE ALL, TO REFLECT SYMBOLICALLY AND
TECHNOLOGICALLY, INDIA'S INTERMEDIATE TECHNOLOGY IN THE 25TH YEAR OF
ITS INDEPENDENCE.
OFFICIALLY KNOWN AS THE HALL OF NATIONS AND INDUSTRIES, THE BUILDING
WAS MADE FROM CONCRETE CAST IN- SITU AND USED A TESSELLATING
TRIANGULAR STRUCTURE TO FORM A CAPPED PYRAMID.
MATERIAL USED: