| By now, you should have a pretty clear idea of what’s involved in the construction of a steel building. If you decide building construction is not for you, remember- find a qualified professional to do the building assembly as soon as possible after your purchase of the building. Experienced erectors are sometimes booked weeks or even months in advance, during their busiest seasons.
If you want to erect a steel building yourself, let your building manufacturer know, so they can recommend the type of building that will make your job the easiest.
Don’t let the terminology of the steel building industry throw you! Here are some definitions of common terms used in Steel Building Construction:
Anchor Bolts - The large bolts that go into the concrete foundation to hold down your building, usually provided by the concrete company. In order for your building to be properly warranted, they must be certified at the specific strength required by the manufacturer for your building.
Bay - Each space or interval between the main frames of a steel building.
Bracket - A structural support projecting from a column which fastens to another metal buildings structural member.
Clip- A plate used for fastening several metal building members together. (look for pre-welded clips)
Cold forming - The process of using press brakes, rolls, or other methods to shape steel into desired cross sections at room temperature.
Column- A load (weight)-carrying vertical member; part of the primary skeletal framing system. Columns do not include posts.
Eave – Line formed where the roof and side wall join together.
Framed Opening - Jambs, headers and trim around an opening in the wall of a metal building. (usually for any sort of door)
Gable - The triangular portion of the metal buildings end-wall that slopes from the top corner of the eave line to the peak.
Girt - A horizontal structural member that is attached to sidewall or end-wall columns and supports the waif sheeting.
Header - A horizontal framing component located at the top of a steel building’s framed opening.
Hoisting equipment- Commercial lifting equipment, including cranes, derricks, tower cranes, barge-mounted derricks or cranes, gin poles, and gantry-hoist systems. Usually required to erect the building.
Hot Rolled - Made by extruding molten steel through a mold.
Jamb - The vertical framing components located at the sides of a steel building’s framed opening.
Main Frame -The steel backbone of the building, made up of two or more columns spaced at intervals between the two end-walls. The main frame, or primary frame, columns bear most of the load of the building and support the rafters that run laterally from one side of the building to the other.
Project structural engineer of record - The registered, licensed professional responsible for the design of structural steel framing and whose seal appears on the structural contract documents.
Purlin - A horizontal structural component attached to the primary frame; supports the building’s roof sheeting.
Rafter - Main beam supporting the roof system.
Secondary framing - The wall girts, roof purlins, and eave struts. These components carry little of the overall load of the building, but do support the wall and roof panels, and help stabilize the building.
Single Slope - A metal building wherein the roof slopes in one direction only, from sidewall to sidewall.
Soffit - The underside covering of any exterior portion of a metal building, such as an overhang.
Systems-engineered metal building – A field-assembled building system consisting of framing, roof, and wall coverings, fabricated in a manufacturing facility and shipped to the job site for assembly into the final structure. The engineering design of the system is the responsibility of the metal building manufacturer.
References:
U.S. Department of Labor
http://www.osha.gov/SLTC/etools/steelerection/definitions.html
Quickie Building Systems, http://www.quickiebuildings.com/
Steel Building.com,
http://www.steelbuilding.com/buildings/frame_overview.htm
|