Re: Help. Too much Weight on 2nd Floor Structure?

Re: Help. Too much Weight on 2nd Floor Structure?

  Home | Guides | Register Now! | Search | About
 misc.consumers.house    Post an article   get this group's latest topics as an RSS feed add this group's latest topics to your My MSN content add this group's latest topics to your My Yahoo content
 Re: Help. Too much Weight on 2nd Floor Structure? Reply Send to a Friend   Print
 
Subject Author Date
Help. Too much Weight on 2nd Floor Structure? Billy 03-12-2006
On 12 Mar 2006 20:52:26 -0800, "Billy" <UseNewz@hotmail.com> wrote:

>I've a bathroom project that I am doing and I loaded all the materials
>into my master bedroom - not knowing if I am loading too much weight on
>the second floor structure. I've placed eight standard sized sheets
>of wonderboard (6 x 9's, I think), four 8 x 12 sheetrock sheets, three
>hardibacker 8 x 10 floor sheets, a 24" bathroom wood cabinet, 25"
>granite top with ceramic inlay bowl amd a Kohler toilet - all in one
>quarter section of a 18 x 12 bedroom. It all seems fairly heavy for the
>one segment of the room, but then I look at our solid wood armoire,
>dresser and bed and think maybe I am sweating this for nothing.
>
>Is this too much weight in one area for a 40 year old single family
>split level home? Is there standards and maximum weight capacities for
>a room? I never really thought about this and need help quick.


Call your building department and see if they can look up the code
standards for approx. year your home was built so you can have an idea
what the live load was designed for (capacity). The next thing is
approx but not really what an engineer would do (too lengthy to give
an exact method here). Take the weight of your material divide by the
area it's occupying and multiply that by about 1.25 (call this a fudge
factor) and see if this combined number is less than the capacity. Of
course, its always best to spread the load out as much as possible
regardless of the calculation.


other useful resources:
Government National Mortgage Association - Ginnie Mae
The National Home Equity Mortgage Association
Fannie Mae Mortgage
Movie-Corner.com Movie Blog