REGISTRATION DEADLINE MONDAY, FEBRUARY 8 After deadline, contact Andrea Hougen at 509.496.0839 or email her at andreahougen@comcast.net for space availability. Wind Design Using the 2006 IBC, ASCE 7-05, and a look at the provisions in the 2009 IBC Thursday, February 11 1:00 PM - 5:00 PM Red Lion Hotel at the Park W 303 North River Drive, Spokane [Click here to view flyer] Many important changes were made to the Wind Load Design Requirements in the transition between the 2003 International Building Code (IBC) and the 2006 International Building Code (IBC). Some were subtle, some were not. There are more changes on the horizon. The SEAOC, SEAO and SEAW Wind Committees, in cooperation with NCSEA, have developed a much faster, simpler method for wind design of typical buildings which has been published in the 2009 IBC. The seminar will provide an overview on the provisions and recommendations for solutions to wind engineering design, especially as those provisions are encapsulated in the traditional method of “All-Heights”. It will discuss how wind flows around a building and how the flow of wind is taken into account by ASCE 7. The seminar will provide a comparison of the traditional method of “All-Heights” to the new “Alternate Method of All-Heights” in the 2009 IBC. The last session of the seminar will present three detailed example problems which compare and contrast the existing and alternate design methods. Ed Huston, Presenter Ed Huston is a 1971 civil engineering graduate of the University of Washington, Ed is a licensed civil and structural engineer in Washington, and is licensed in seven other western states. He is a principal in the firm of Smith & Huston, Inc., Consulting Engineers in Seattle, Washington. Ed has over 38 years of experience in structural design, evaluation,investigation and code and standards development. He has been very active in the Structural Engineers Association of Washington, (SEAW) holding positions as Seattle Chapter President and State Association President. He is currently chair of the Exam Committee, and coordinates the Northwest Conference Council. Ed is a former President of the Board of Directors of NCSEA. He is chair of the Code Advisory Committee – General Requirements Committee and serves on the Licensing committee. Ed has served on the board of directors and as President of the Applied Technology Council, (ATC) a national organization whose goal is the research into the effects of earthquakes and other natural forces and the dissemination of the results of that research. Ed was a member of the SAC Steel Project Joint Venture Management Committee; was on the Project Review Panel of ATC 43 - Evaluation of Earthquake Damaged Concrete and Masonry Wall Buildings; and was Lead Technical Consultant on ATC 45 - A Field Manual for Safety Evaluations of Buildings after Windstorms and Floods. He also served on the Project Engineering Panel for the ATC Design Guide 2: Basic Wind Engineering of Low-Rise Buildings. Ed is a member of The Masonry Society and has served on their board of directors as board member, secretary and treasurer. He also serves on the Masonry Standards Joint Committee, which writes the masonry standard and specification. He represented SEAW on The Puget Sound Engineering Council, an association of 24 Engineering Societies, and served as Secretary. Ed is also a member of the Institute of Structural Engineers, headquartered in London, England. Ed is a co-author of the Wind Commentary to the Uniform Building Code - 1991 Edition & 1994 Editions, ATC-60, SEAW Commentary on Wind Code Provisions, as well as the SEAW RSM-03, SEAW’s Handbook of a Rapid Solution Methodology™ for Wind Design and The Masonry Designers' Guide to the ACI/ASCE 530 Code, First through Fifth Editions. He has made over 60 seminar and technical presentations. |