W L L - R B: U E E: IND Oads On OW ISE Uildings Pstream Xposure Ffect
W L L - R B: U E E: IND Oads On OW ISE Uildings Pstream Xposure Ffect
Introduction
Wind-induced loads on low-rise buildings are evaluated based on a set of parameters,
such as dynamic velocity (q), exposure factor (Ce) and gust pressure coefficient (CpCg). The
importance of accurate representation of upstream terrain characteristics during wind tunnel
tests has been widely addressed (Stathopoulos 1984, Levitan et al. 1990, Mehta and Smith
2004). The success of wind tunnel experiments is directly related to the availability of
accurate upstream terrain characteristics such as wind speed, direction, power spectra,
roughness length etc. The impact of different upstream exposures on the gust pressure values
was until recently addressed by various codes through the conservative approach of open
terrain simulation properly factored for directionality effects. Current interest of the American
and Canadian code committees initiated a new potential for studies where a more efficient and
rigorous definition of upstream exposure and roughness is intended (Stathopoulos et al 2009).
Currently both the American (ASCE 7-05) and the Canadian (NBCC 2005) provisions use the
suburban velocity profile for cases in which the exposure is classified in accordance with the
code definition as suburban.
Of special interest to the present study is the experimental work conducted by Wang
and Stathopoulos (2006). A low building model was tested for a total of 66 fetch cases and 13
wind angles of attack to evaluate the effect of upstream exposure on the wind loading. The
different upstream configurations revealed that peak wind loads are basically affected by short
distance roughness characteristics rather than further terrain properties. In most cases these
loads can be determined by considering a fetch of 300-400 meter since lengths greater than
that seem not to affect the wind-induced response. Moreover, the study carefully addresses
the impact of “rougher” patches located on the proximity of the examined building and the
importance of such variations to both mean and peak wind loads. The findings are closely
The Seventh Asia-Pacific Conference on Wind Engineering, November 8-12, 2009, Taipei, Taiwan
related to the objectives of the current study where full-scale findings in conjunction to wind
tunnel experiments are coupled to evaluate upstream terrain characteristics and their influence
on local pressures and total response of the building.
Field Facilities
The experimental house is located in Fredericton (New Brunswick, Canada), in a
relatively open-suburban area. The test building is a single storey typical North-American
residential house with a rectangular layout, external dimensions of 8.6x17.2x5.6 meter
(WxLxH) and a duo-pitch roof of 4/12 slope. More details about the test house and the
instrumentation can be found in Doudak (2005) and Zisis (2006).
A 12-meter high mast located approximately 20 meters west of the house was used to
mount three propeller anemometers at heights of 5.0, 6.5 and 10.0 meters. A second smaller
mast was added on the east side of the test house equipped with one anemometer at a height
of 5.0 meters. An aerial view of the area with the actual building and the meteorological
towers is shown in Figure 1. The test house was equipped with 27 foundation and 6 roof load
cells. Moreover, 40 pressure taps were distributed on the wall and roof surface, as shown in
Figure 2.
Figure 1: Test House and Figure 2: Load Cell and Pressure Tap Location on the
Meteorological Tower Location Experimental House
Wind Tunnel Simulation
The wind tunnel tests were conducted at the Building Aerodynamics Laboratory
located in the Engineering Complex at Concordia University. A geometric scale of 1:200 was
selected for the wind tunnel study. The metallic model has external dimensions of 86.5 mm
by 42.5 mm (length – width) and a total height of 24.35 mm (ridge height – excluding
concrete foundation wall). The model is equipped with 126 pressure taps located on the wall
and roof surface respecting the full-scale tap distribution. In addition to the building model, a
proximity model of was constructed at the same 1:200 scale. Considering the scale of the test
model and the size of the wind tunnel test section, a circular wood base of 1.60-meter
diameter and 3.0 mm thickness was used to place all surrounding structures and tree elements
on it, as shown in Figure 3.
The Seventh Asia-Pacific Conference on Wind Engineering, November 8-12, 2009, Taipei, Taiwan
Figure 3: Wind Tunnel Building Model, Surroundings and Examined Wind Directions
Results and Discussion
Of great interest was to evaluate the basic exposure characteristics (power law
exponent, turbulence intensity and roughness length) using the available field data. Wind data
collected from two anemometers (at 6.5 and 10.0-meter height) during October to December
2008 and April to June 2009 were analyzed and power law exponent, turbulence intensity and
roughness length values were calculated. Due to a sensor malfunction the third anemometer
(5.0 meter height) could not be used reducing, to some extent, the accuracy of the derived
characteristics. The results are based on 10-minute averaged statistical values (mean and
standard deviation) and were filtered for wind speeds over 10 km/h (at 6.5-meter height). The
distribution with respect to direction is shown in Figures 5a, 5b and 5c. The power law
exponent ranges from 0.05 to 0.50, the turbulence intensity from 20 to 50% and the roughness
length from a few millimeters up to 1.2 meters. It is quite interesting how these properties
vary considering that the test house is located in a relatively open area with only few low-rise
buildings and medium height trees in the proximity. Following current wind provision
guidelines and “common” wind engineering sense, the terrain would be classified in the open
to sub-urban region expecting a power law exponent in the range of 0.20. The higher
variations should be clearly attributed to the influence of adjacent buildings (north and south
sides) and forestry area (east side) located inside the radius of the 300-400 meter fetch. These
deviating terrain properties indicate that complex terrains need to be examined carefully in
order to properly conduct scaled model tests and successfully compare full-scale to wind
tunnel results.
N E S W
1.0
0.9
Power Law Exponent .
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
N E S W
1.0
0.9
Turbulence Intensity
0.8
0.7
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
N E S W
1.4
Roughness Length 1.2
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
Figure 5c: Roughness Length for Field Data
CP,mean
0.2
0.0
-0.2
-0.4
-0.6
-0.8
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
2.0
1.0
Cp
0.0
-1.0
-2.0
-3.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
Figure 6a: Mean and Peak Pressure Coefficient Comparison (Wall Pressure Tap)
-0.4
-0.6
-0.8
-1.0 Pressure Tap R26
-1.2
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
1.0
0.0
-1.0
Cp
-2.0
-3.0
-5.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
Figure 6b: Mean and Peak Pressure Coefficient Comparison (Roof Pressure Tap)
The Seventh Asia-Pacific Conference on Wind Engineering, November 8-12, 2009, Taipei, Taiwan
higher for the peak pressure coefficient for which the effect of the different simulation profile
is also pronounced (a=0.16 versus a=0.21). These discrepancies also coincide with the region
where the upstream terrain data were disturbed resulting into higher power law exponent and
roughness length (240-290 degrees). This particular case also demonstrates the impact and
importance of varying upstream terrain properties to the resulting wind-induced local
pressures.
Force Coefficient Comparison
A unique characteristic of the experimental house is that it is structurally isolated from
the foundation. The total uplift force was recorded and normalized in accordance to the
approaching wind characteristics. Moreover data from the wind tunnel experiments were used
to assess the equivalent total uplift force coefficient using Eq. (2):
Fz , mean / peak
c f , mean / peak = 2
(2)
(1/ 2 ρVBH ) A
where ρ=air density (kg/m3); VBH=wind speed at the building height (m/s); Fz,mean/peak=total
uplift force (N), and A=building area (m2). The full-scale force coefficient was based on field-
recorded data, whereas the wind tunnel force coefficient was the result of the integration of
the vertical component of all pressures. Similar to the pressure coefficient analysis, both mean
and peak components were considered (Figure 7). The field data were collected during May
and June of 2009 and were filtered for wind speeds over 10 km/h. The mean values were
averaged over a period of 10 minutes and the peaks on a 3-second basis (full-scale time scale).
-0.2
Cf,mean
-0.4
-0.6
-0.8
-1.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
0.5
0.0
-0.5
Cf
-1.0
-1.5
-2.0
-2.5
-3.0
0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240 270 300 330 360
Wind Direction
The effect of adequate upstream simulation in the wind tunnel experiments is even
more pronounced on this case. The two different wind tunnel tests (Test A and B) resulted
into two discrete trends which for some critical wind directions differ up to 25% for the mean
and 40% for the peak values. Results from both wind tunnel tests are within the range of the
field data but seem to underestimate the averaged (integration of different full-scale records)
peak component, which can be partially justified by the lower level of turbulence. Higher
fluctuations of the wind direction should also be addressed and considered accountable for the
above mentioned discrepancies.
Conclusions
Field data from two anemometers were used to define the exposure characteristics of a
full-scale testing facility. The data interpretation showed higher than expected variations for
power law exponents and roughness lengths; the variation for wind turbulence intensity was
relatively small. Two sets of data from wind tunnel tests have been compared with the field
results in the form of pressure and total uplift force coefficients. The comparisons indicate
discrepancies between the two different wind tunnel terrain configurations, which in some
cases could be considered critical for the agreement between the field and the simulation
studies.
References
ASCE/SEI 7-05, 2006, “Minimum Design Loads for Building and other Structures”, American Society of Civil
Engineers, ASCE, New York, USA.
Doudak, G., 2005, Field Determination and Modeling of Load Paths in Wood Light-Frame Structures, PhD
Thesis, Department of Civil Engineering and Applied Mechanics, McGill University, Montreal, Canada.
Environment Canada Weather Office, Natural Resources Canada (NRC), http://www.climate.weatheroffice.ec.gc.ca.
Levitan, M., L., Mehta, K., C., Chok, C., V. & Millsaps, D., L., 1990, “An Overview of Texas Tech's Wind
Engineering Field Research Laboratory”, Journal of Wind Engineering and Industrial Aerodynamics, 36, Part
2, 1037-1046.
Mehta, K. C., & Smith, D. A., 2004, “Full-Scale Measurements for Wind Effects on Buildings”, ASCE
Conference Proceedings 153 (27), Houston, Texas.
NBCC, 2005, “National Building Code of Canada”, National Research Council of Canada (NRC), Ottawa,
Canada.
Stathopoulos, T., 1984, “Wind Loads on Low-Rise Buildings: A Review of the State of the Art”, Engineering
Structures, Volume 6, Issue 2, Pages 119-135.
Stathopoulos, T., Wang, K., & Zisis, I., 2009, “Wind Loading and Building Exposure: Are we Still on A, B, C?”,
SEI/ASCE Structures Congress, April 2009, Austin, Texas, USA.
Wang, K., & Stathopoulos, T., 2006, “The Impact of Exposure on Wind Loading of Low Buildings”, SEI/ASCE
Structures Congress, May 2006, St. Louis, Missouri, USA.
Zisis, I., 2006, Structural Monitoring and Wind Tunnel Studies of a Low Wooden Building, MASc Thesis, Civil,
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