Talk Back
Post a CommentRelated Articles
- NHQ 2009: K. Hovnanian’s Virginia division has cultivated trades who love them
- 100th Verifier Accredited for National Green Building Certification
- Mistakes to avoid when running a homebuilding company
- Anatomy of a Best Practice
- How homebuilders can find and keep the best custom building tradespeople
[View All]
|
|||||||
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- Home Mortgage Rates Set to Move Higher Next Spring
- Tax Credit Extension to Give Housing Recovery a Boost
- Design Challenge Winners Tackle the Multigenerational Household
- The Energetic Discipline Behind Professional Builder's Builder of the Year
- What remodelers need to know about the new lead paint rules
- Remodelers Tighten Up Labor Costs to Stay Afloat
- Use abandoned phone numbers to boost remodeling business
- What Today's First-Time Buyers Want in a New Home
- 100 Best New Products 2009
- Remodeling market down, but remodelers expect recovery
LP Building Products to Take Part in World's Largest Earthquake Shake Table Test
Company's I-Joists, LVL will be main structural floor components
News Release
May 4, 2009
HousingZone
This summer in Japan, LP Building Products will take part in the world's largest shake table test ever attempted to demonstrate the importance of earthquake-resistant construction around the world. The Network for Earthquake Engineering and Simulation (NEES) will test a seven-story, 23-unit condominium tower weighing nearly a million pounds that utilizes LP SolidStart I-Joists and LP SolidStart Laminated Veneer Lumber (LVL) as the main structural components of the tower floors. The test is intended to help researchers find new design methods for buildings in urban, earthquake-prone areas. In June, the tower will be lifted onto the world's largest shake table at the Hyogo Earthquake Engineering Research Center in Miki City, Japan. The project, known as the NEESWood Capstone Tests, will simulate a series of earthquakes similar to the 1994 Northridge, Calif., earthquake that killed 72 people and caused an estimated $20 billion in damage.
"The outcome of the tests could lead to taller wood-frame buildings in active seismic zones," said John van de Lindt, a Colorado State University civil engineering professor who serves as the principal investigator for the project.
LP will take part in the tests along with Simpson Strong-Tie Company, which makes anchors and tie-downs, and builder Maui Homes, who will construct the condominium tower. The NEESWood Capstone Tests are the result of a collaboration of five universities, including Colorado State University, Texas A&M University, SUNY-Buffalo, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and the University of Delaware, and a four-year $1.4 million grant from the National Science Foundation.
For more information on the NEESWood Capstone Tests, visit http://www.engr.colostate.edu/NEESWood/capstone.shtml. For more information on the shake table, visit http://www.bosai.go.jp/hyogo/ehyogo/.
© 2009, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.










Digg This