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Saving A Sanctuary
When portions of a historically important wood-framed church in Mobile, Alabama, were destroyed by a tornado on Christmas Day 2012, there was concern that some of the 150-year-old solid sawn lumber that lends so much character to the structure would have to be replaced by steel. But careful structural analyses revealed that, with the strategic addition of steel plates, bolts, and other fixes, the church's cherished southern pine framing could be redeemed.
Saving A Sanctuary
When portions of a historically important wood-framed church in Mobile, Alabama, were destroyed by a tornado on Christmas Day 2012, there was concern that some of the 150-year-old solid sawn lumber that lends so much character to the structure would have to be replaced by steel. But careful structural analyses revealed that, with the strategic addition of steel plates, bolts, and other fixes, the church's cherished southern pine framing could be redeemed.
Saving A Sanctuary
Horst, Michael (author) / Clemons, Benjamin (author)
Civil Engineering Magazine Archive ; 86 ; 74-83
2017-01-01
102016-01-01 pages
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
Unknown
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