Structural Engineering Forces

Loads, Stress, and Building Safety

Learn Structural Forces

Every building, bridge, and structure must resist forces from gravity, wind, earthquakes, and occupants. Structural engineers calculate these forces to design safe, economical structures. Understanding these loads helps appreciate how buildings stay standing.

Types of Loads

Dead Load (Permanent)

The weight of the structure itself and permanent attachments:

  • Structural elements (beams, columns, floors)
  • Roofing, flooring, ceilings
  • Mechanical equipment (HVAC)
  • Permanent partitions

Example: A concrete floor might be 2.4 kN/m² (50 lb/ft²) dead load.

Live Load (Temporary)

Movable loads that come and go:

  • People and crowds
  • Furniture and contents
  • Vehicles (for bridges/parking)
  • Stored materials

Typical Live Load Requirements

OccupancykN/m²lb/ft²
Residential1.940
Office2.450
Retail3.6-4.875-100
Assembly (fixed seats)2.960
Assembly (movable seats)4.8100
Parking garage2.450
Light storage6.0125
Heavy storage12.0250

Environmental Forces

Wind Load

  • Varies with building height, shape, location
  • Can be 0.5-3+ kN/m² (10-60+ lb/ft²) on building surfaces
  • Creates both pressure and suction
  • Tall buildings must resist overturning

Snow Load

  • Depends on geographic location and roof slope
  • Ranges from 0.5 kN/m² (10 lb/ft²) to 7+ kN/m² (150+ lb/ft²)
  • Can drift and accumulate unevenly

Seismic (Earthquake) Forces

  • Ground acceleration creates lateral forces
  • Forces proportional to building mass
  • Varies by seismic zone
  • Design for ductility and energy absorption

Internal Forces

External loads create internal forces in structural members:

Types of Internal Forces

  • Tension: Pulling apart (cables, bottom of beams)
  • Compression: Pushing together (columns, top of beams)
  • Shear: Sliding/cutting force
  • Bending: Combination of tension and compression
  • Torsion: Twisting

Stress

Stress = Force / Area

Materials have allowable stress limits that structures must not exceed.

Safety Factors

Structures are designed with margins of safety:

ApproachMethodTypical Factor
Working StressAllowable stress ÷ safety factor1.5-3.0
LRFD (Load Factor)Factored loads vs. reduced capacityVaries by load type

Load Combinations

Codes specify how to combine different loads:

Example: 1.2 × Dead + 1.6 × Live + 0.5 × Snow

The most severe combination governs the design.

Conclusion

Structural engineers analyze forces from gravity (dead and live loads), wind, snow, earthquakes, and other sources to design safe structures. These forces create internal stresses that materials must resist. Safety factors and load combinations ensure structures remain safe even under worst-case scenarios. Understanding these principles explains why buildings have the sizes and proportions they do.

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Structural Engineering Forces: Loads, Stress, Safety | YounitConverter