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structural system

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.02 sec.

structural system

In building construction, the particular method of assembling and constructing structural elements of a building so that they support and transmit applied loads safely to the ground without exceeding the allowable stresses in the members. Basic types of systems include bearing-wall, post-and-beam, frame, membrane, and suspension. They fall into three major categories: low-rise, high-rise, and long-span. Systems for long-span buildings (column-free spaces of over 100 ft, or 30 m) include tension and compression systems (subject to bending) and funicular systems, which are shaped to experience either pure tension or pure compression. Bending structures include the girder and two-way grids and slabs. Funicular structures include cable structures, membrane structures, and vaults and domes. See also framed structure; post-and-beam system; shell structure.



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For example, it is rare that you would find an electrical engineer that can also design a building's structural system.
A new structural system, derived from systematic deformation of the grid, supports a skin of glass and steel as well as an enlarged, habitable roofscape with more than a whiff of Yokohama Port Terminal about it.
I'll point out the potential of the site, what could be developed, the profitability and then the details like the best way to make parking work or the structural system we should go with.
 
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