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Steel-timber composite system proposed for mid- and high-rise buildings

Codes and Standards

Steel-timber composite system proposed for mid- and high-rise buildings

Structural steel columns and beams support a cross-laminated timber floor system.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | December 11, 2017

A new report and a video presentation support the concept of a steel and timber composite system for mid- and high-rise buildings.

The American Institute of Steel Construction (AISC) and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill LLP (SOM) recently released the report which proposes a system consisting of structural steel columns and beams that support a Cross-Laminated Timber (CLT) floor system, creating a flat soffit condition. AISC and SOM partnered to study the combination of steel and CLT with an eye toward residential construction.

ā€œAISC and SOMā€™s study successfully shows that the comparative steel-timber composite construction system could also be competitive in the high-rise residential market,ā€ according to a news release. The steel and timber framing system builds on SOMā€™s Timber Tower Research Project that studied timber-concrete composite construction for a hypothetical high-rise building.

The report, ā€œAISC Steel and Timber Research for High Rise Residential Buildings - Final Report,ā€ and a video presentation by Benton Johnson, PE, SE, LEED Green Associate, senior structural engineer at SOM, titled, ā€œYour Next Project Considering Steel & Timber Research for Residential Buildings,ā€ are available for free atĀ www.aisc.org/timberresearch.

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