How Structures Work: Design and Behaviour from Bridges to Buildings

Front Cover
John Wiley & Sons, Aug 3, 2009 - Architecture - 264 pages
The alliance between architecture and structural engineering is fundamental to the design of the buildings and bridges around us. Anyone who needs or wants to “understand” a building must have a good understanding of the structural concepts involved. Yet “structure” is often cloaked in mathematics – which many find difficult to get to grips with.

How Structures Work has been written to explain the behaviour of structures in a clear way without resorting to complex mathematics. Using the minimum of mathematics it explains the structural concepts clearly, illustrated by many historical and contemporary examples, allowing readers to build up a general understanding of structures. In this way they can easily comprehend the structural aspects of buildings for themselves.

Primarily aimed at students who require a good qualitative understanding of the behaviour of structures and their materials, it will be of particular interest to students of architecture and building surveying, plus architectural historians and conservationists. The straightforward, non-mathematical approach ensures it will also be suitable for a wider audience including building administrators, archaeologists and the interested layman.

 

Contents

Brackets and Bridges
1
Stiffening a Beam Girder Bridges
17
Arches and Suspension Bridges
34
Bringing the Loads to the Ground The Structural Scheme
65
Safe as Houses? Walls
80
Foundation loads
94
Foundation stresses
101
The coming of iron
116
7
135
Providing Shelter Roofs
181
Structures in a Threedimensional World
200
Some Elements of Grammar
228
Index
243
174
244
Copyright

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About the author (2009)

David Yeomans is an engineer and an historian. He taught structural design at the Oxford and Liverpool Schools of Architecture and building construction, history and building conservation at Manchester University.
He currently teaches on the MSc course in timber conservation at the Weald and Downland Museum (run on behalf of Bournemouth University) and is also Senior Research Fellow at Liverpool University. He also practices as a structural engineer specializing in timber structures – both new-build and conservation work. He is secretary of the International Scientific Committee for the Analysis and restoration of Structures of Architectural Heritage, which is an ICOMOS scientific committee.

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