Russell wrote:Wage Slave wrote:Coligny wrote:chokonen888 wrote:No weight up there? Did they build with used chopsticks and cardboard or did they take "stick frame" literally?
The dangerous reverse pendulum effect, disastrous during quakes... You know like those fucking elevated highway they build everywhere with T shaped pillars. That collapsed so gracefully in Kobe...l
Exactly the worry. The house is light steel frame rather than heavy steel frame so that may make a difference. As far as I can make out, It relies on a large number of fairly light steel girders arranged in a fairly dense cage with strategic panels in the corners built much more strongly. There isn't any doubt it will withstand a quake well but is a product of fairly careful design and calculation rather than brute force over engineering. Hence, mess with it at your peril was the consensus.
My home was built by Sekisui House 15 years ago. Main steel frame is 3.5 mm thick or so (I have to measure to get the exact thickness), with beams shaped in a エ form that is 200 mm high and 100 mm wide. There are also thinner beams, shaped in a コ form with height 75 mm and width 45 mm (I don't have the measurements of the thickness of the steel at hand).
Covering the whole attic with a floor would add about 1000 kg, assuming I use 15 mm concrete panels (コンパネ). It may be an option to use 12 mm and laying the floor in only part of the attic to save on weight and cost. Even a floor of 25 square meters up there would be very useful.
Design safety factors of each structural member in a building is typically around 2.0, which I assume may be applicable in this case too. This is relatively low, because loads are well understood.
Yep, maybe I should reduce the floor space up there...
That sounds pretty similar to mine except you describe it far better. One across the road was demolished recently so I got a glimpse of the wall structure too and it is similar to your description too except for the special panels in some corners.
Seriously, invite Sekisui to quote on the job. They will turn up with a whole bunch of file drawings and data on the house. The guy who showed up here was happy to leave some of it with us and talk about other aspects of the house in some detail. Nice people but for our extension the way they insisted on doing it was very proper but just uneconomic. The local builder had a better solution involving building around the balcony rather than removing it and not attempting to integrate the two structures.