oblique colon

sahip11

New Member
The architect does not change the project, the contractor does not want beams in the room, this is the case in the basement floor. I wonder if those who have time can evaluate it. This will be the first time in a place with a population of 60,000
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Re: SQUARE COLUMN Your municipality may not allow slanted column. As a different solution suggestion, you can lay hollow blocks on the entire floor or only the areas where the beams you do not want to be seen. It is necessary to see the architectural project, but it seems to me that you can easily overcome this problem with the method I mentioned.
 
Re: ANGLE COLUMN Oblique column is of course a solution. But I don't think there is a necessary solution for such a building. I think the architect should give up the "I drew the project like this, whatever you do" attitude. The architect must be able to present and defend his own solution. He can change his current design and choose a different layout. There is no record of a single architectural layout pertaining to a plot. I have always argued that; Our architects have to design the structural system of the project they have drawn to a minimum extent. If they did not make this prediction, it means that they left all kinds of savings on the building to the engineer and suffered the consequences. I would never choose such a static design for such a building if I were you. Take it easy, my love....
 
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