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  2. Steel plate shear wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steel_plate_shear_wall

    Accelerates structural steel erection by using shop-welded and field-bolted steel panels, and thus, less inspection and reduced quality control costs; Permits efficient design of lateral-resisting systems by distributing large forces evenly. A steel plate shear element consists of steel infill plates bounded by a column-beam system.

  3. Skyscraper design and construction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Skyscraper_design_and...

    A shear wall, in its simplest definition, is a wall where the entire material of the wall is employed in the resistance of both horizontal and vertical loads. A typical example is a brick or cinderblock wall. Since the wall material is used to hold the weight, as the wall expands in size, it must hold considerably more weight.

  4. Rhodes State Office Tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rhodes_State_Office_Tower

    [5]: 12 The lower floors of the building were designed to house the Supreme Court of Ohio; the court's chamber there is visible from the exterior with a projecting granite wall, surrounded by glass walls that further emphasize the chamber. [18] The tower has a steel frame above a foundation of concrete-filled steel caissons.

  5. Shear wall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shear_wall

    A structure of shear walls in the center of a large building—often encasing an elevator shaft or stairwell—form a shear core. In multi-storey commercial buildings, shear walls form at least one core (Figure 3). From a building services perspective, the shear core houses communal services including stairs, lifts, toilets and service risers.

  6. Structural system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_system

    Shear structures: These are structures such as reinforced concrete or wooden shear walls, which are used in multistory buildings to reduce lateral movements due to wind loads and earthquake excitations. Shear structures develop mainly in-plane shear with relatively small bending stresses under the action of external loads.

  7. Core (architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_(architecture)

    A core may include staircases, elevators, electrical cables, water pipes and risers. A core allows people to move between the floors of a building, and distributes services efficiently to the floors. A core may also serve a key structural role in a building, helping support it and acting as a load-bearing structure with load-bearing walls.

  8. Pole building framing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pole_building_framing

    The walls may be designed as a shear wall to provide structural stability. Other girt systems include framing in between the posts rather than on the outer side of the posts. [ 6 ] Siding materials for a pole building are most commonly rolled-rib 29-gauge enameled steel cut to length in 32-or-36-inch (813 or 914 mm) widths attached using color ...

  9. List of tallest buildings in Columbus, Ohio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tallest_buildings...

    The structure is the fifth-tallest completed building in the state, [2] and is also Ohio's tallest building that rises in the center of a city block. [1] The city's second-tallest structure is the LeVeque Tower; this 1927 Art Deco skyscraper was the first building in the state to be built on caisson foundations. [3]

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