3 Recent Innovations For Steel and Composite Steel-Concrete Structures in Australia
3 Recent Innovations For Steel and Composite Steel-Concrete Structures in Australia
3 Recent Innovations For Steel and Composite Steel-Concrete Structures in Australia
Brian Uy,
Professor of Structural Engineering & Director,
Centre for Infrastructure Engineering & Safety
Abstract
Structural steel and its use in Australia can be traced back well over a century with its
use in iconic bridge projects and prolific widespread use in general. Its prolific use in
building projects has a much shorter history of half a century in multi-storey buildings
of the 1960s in Sydney when building height restrictions were lifted. This paper will
trace the advancements and achievements in structural steel in bridges and building
projects, stadia and transport infrastructure in Australia over the last century. The
development of Australian Standards for the use of structural steel and composite
steel-concrete structures in buildings and bridges will also be provided. This will
include a review of the current project on the Australian Bridge Design Code AS5100:
Part 6 for Steel and composite structures and Part 8 which also includes new aspects
to deal with retrofitting and strengthening to deal with the current challenges facing
the management of ageing infrastructure. The paper will also review aspects of the
new Australia/New Zealand Standard AS/NZS2327 on Composite steel-concrete
structures for buildings which incorporates the design of slabs, beams, columns and
systems as well as the mooted development of a Australia/New Zealand Standard on
Steel structures AS/NZS 4100. The paper will conclude with an analysis of the future,
including a review of existing and future building and infrastructure projects and the
use of structural steel. Future research into structural steel in Australia will also be
provided at the conclusion of this paper.
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Major civil engineering projects involving
structural steel include the 124 year old
rail crossing of the Hawkesbury River
north of Sydney and the 81 year old
Sydney Harbour Bridge. The Hawkesbury
River rail bridge was designed and built
by the Union Bridge Company from New
York, USA and officially opened in 1889.
The Sydney Harbour Bridge completed in
1932 was based on a general design by
the NSW Department of Public Works
but heavily based on New Yorks Hell
Gate Bridge and with detailed design by
Dorman Long and Co, Middlesborough,
UK through Sir Ralph Freeman and Sir
Douglas Fox.
Type of
Framing
Material
Australian Tall
Buildings(%)
Steel
53
30
Concrete
20
50
Mixed
27
20
Total
100
100
One of the driving forces for innovation in the design and construction of tall steel
buildings has included the use of composite construction techniques. Some of the
more innovative composite construction applications have been confined to a few
iconic buildings of typically multi-storey and tall building structures. Some of these
typical innovations have included the use of high strength cold formed steel for
composite slabs. Conventional steel-concrete composite beams have also benefited
from some innovations in the use of semi-rigid joint action and pre-cambering of steel
beams in frames. The use of concrete filled steel columns has seen tremendous
innovations, particularly in the use of very thin-walled steel tubes and box columns for
the fabrication of concrete filled columns. Other more specialised innovations in
composite construction have also included the use of post-tensioned composite
trusses.
More recent projects have shown that for specialty structures such as stadia, exhibition
centres and transport infrastructure, the use of structural steel has promoted the
ability for reuse. This is seen to be a very important initiative for the future and salient
examples will be provided herein to illustrate some of the technical challenges that
need addressing in order to ensure that these are made feasible.
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Bridges
Structural steel standards have been important in
Australia and date back to the late 19th and early 20th
century when Australia typically imported much of its
steel. The Sydney Harbour Bridge conceived in the late
1800s, constructed during the 1920s and completed in
the 1930s used steel sections imported from Dorman
Long in the United Kingdom, (Lalor, 2006). This bridge
is constantly being maintained and repaired and
currently has a structural health monitoring system to
assist in assessing damage to certain critical sections.
Bridges
One of the most significant bridges in Australia is the
Westgate Bridge over the Yarra River in Melbourne,
which links the Western Suburbs of Melbourne and
the southern parts of Victoria to its capital Melbourne.
This bridge is a steel box girder cable stayed bridge
which has a main river span of 336 m and has a total
length of more than 2500 metres. This bridge
collapsed during construction in October 1970, which
resulted in a Royal Commission. This and a number of
other notable collapses of box girder bridges in the UK
and Germany also resulted in many important rules
being developed by the Merrison Committee in the
United Kingdom. In 2006, the Victorian government
approved plans to refurbish the bridge. Some of the
significant factors included strengthening the box
girders whilst maintaining traffic flow over the entire
works period. These works were completed in June
2011 and included significant work on the box girder.
Much of the work involved the use of blind bolting
techniques to increase plate stiffener thicknesses,
thereby reducing the stress range operating in the
boxes and subsequently the fatigue life of the
structure.
A major composite bridge was built over the Georges River in Sydney in 1987.
This was a parallel bridge to the 1923 Pratt Truss steel bridge which was
completed in 1923. The new bridge consisted of eight 70 m spans involving
three steel box girders utilising composite action with the concrete deck. A
major composite-steel concrete bridge was built in Sydney in 2000 at Roberts
Road crossing the Hume Highway and linking northern and southern arterial
roads of Sydney. The superstructure of this bridge comprised four steel
trough girders supporting a concrete deck across six continuous spans ranging
from 25-40 metres. The sections adopted 350 MPa (N/mm2) steel plates with
1400 mm depth and 2250 width sections. In addition to some of the more
obvious challenges, some other engineering challenges in the bridge design
realm, will be in the area of urban design. Architects are finding increasing
involvement in the urban design of bridges. Architectural involvement then
poses unique challenges for structural engineers which need solutions to be
available. A recent bridge designed in Clifton Hill, Melbourne involved
significant architectural involvement and penetrations were required to
achieve the architectural objective.
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Forrest Plaza
The Forrest Plaza building is in the
central business district of Perth and the
building was completed in 1988. The
building was designed by structural
engineers Ove Arup and Partners and
construction was completed by builders
Multiplex, (Gillett and Watson, 1987).
The building has a total height of 110
metres over 28 storeys. This building is
unique in that it was the first steel
building built in Perth in a decade. Some
of the novel features which were used in
the design and construction of this
building included the use of concrete
filled steel box columns. Furthermore,
profiled steel sheeting fixed over two
floors was used in the construction
phase. Composite action for the slabs
and beams were used throughout the
height of the building.
Latitude, 2005
The beams in the floor system
span a total of 14 metres from
core to perimeter frame and in
order to achieve this the beams
were pre-cambered by 40 mm to
overcome estimated long term
deflections of 60 mm. The
building also uses twin composite
columns on the perimeter frame,
using 508 mm diameter steel
tubes filled with 80 MPa concrete.
The building has required the
design of 7 metre deep transfer
trusses using large diameter steel
tubes filled with concrete and
large high strength steel boxes
filled with concrete.
Latitude, Sydney
Exoskeleton
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Stadia
Probably the best example of a
structure which has been made
demountable in Australia is the
Olympic Stadium built for the Sydney
Olympics in 2000. The structure was
designed to seat 110,000 people
during the Olympics with two large
end stands. These end stands were
then removed after the Olympics and
thereby reducing the capacity to
80,000. These end stands were then
transported to Wollongong, 80 km
south of Sydney and used in the
reconstruction of the WIN stadium. To
facilitate the concept of
deconstruction a special blind bolting
technique was utilised.
Blind bolting
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Transport infrastructure
A significant application of transport
infrastructure which is being mooted
for reuse in Australia is the Sydney
monorail. The monorail which links
the Darling Harbour area with the
Sydney Central Business District. The
plans are to dismantle this and to
relocate to Hobart, which is the Capitol
of the Australian island state of
Tasmania, (Sydney Morning Herald,
2012).
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
AS2327.1-2003
Composite structures: simply supported beams
The development of an Australian Standard in
limits states form resulted in the standard
AS2327.1 which was first released in 1996 and
further amendments were produced for a further
revision in 2003, Standards Australia, (1996 and
2003). The Australian Standard deals with the
design of simply supported composite-steel
concrete beams. The major innovations in this
standard are the ability to allow the use of partial
shear connection. The standard also requires
designers to pay close attention to the various
stages of loading, namely construction, service
and ultimate loading stages. The document does
not cover continuous or semi-continuous beam
behaviour and currently does not allow for the
use of precast or hollowcore slabs to be made
composite with steel beams. Designers wanting
to take advantage of continuity have often availed
themselves of European Standards, (British
Standards Institution, (1994)). Further progress
over the next few years should see progress on
this new standard which is ongoing in the AS/NZS
2327 project, (Standards Australia, 2014a).
Structure
Introduction
Bridges
Buildings
Stadia and special structures
Transport infrastructure
Australian standards
Further research
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
Deconstructability
Following on from recent practical examples, such as the
deconstruction of the end stands of the Sydney Olympic
Stadium, recent research has been carried out on
deconstruction of steel and steel-concrete composite beam
systems. Initial research has illustrated that for both
stiffness and strength purposes, bolted shear connectors
can provide the same or improved performance for
composite beam behaviour when compared with headed
shear studs. The following figures show the type of bolted
shear connectors and how they have been shown to allow
demountability in composite beams, (Mirza et al, 2010and
Pathirana et al, 2012).
Deconstructability
New materials
Recent trends in Australian
Building Construction have
been calling for the use of
higher strength steel and
concrete with reduced
amounts of Ordinary Portland
Cement (OPC), (Green Building
Council, 2009, 2010a and
2010b). Recent research into
column systems which use
both high strength steel and
reduced amounts of OPC have
been recently carried out,
(Khan et al. 2013).
600
500
4 mm
400
1 mm
300
2.5 mm
200
100
0
0
10
15
20
-100
-200
-300
25
30
15
20
25
b/t
30
35
Conclusions
This paper has introduced the history of steel and composite steelconcrete construction from the perspective of applications in Australia
over more than a century. Much of the innovation in these bridges,
buildings, stadia and other structures has driven the research efforts in
these areas in Australia. However, more recently, the research has
become more pro-active and solutions for industry have had some of
their fundamentals founded in the research that has been conducted
in Australia. A summary of design approaches by way of Australian
Standards from an Australian design perspective has been given.
Much of the research conducted in Australia has been underpinning
the applications and it is pertinent that Australian Standards need to
be properly developed to support the applications more pro-actively.
Finally this paper has identified some of the new areas of research that
have eventuated due to sustainability principles. This is a new and
novel method for research in structural engineering and will continue
to grow in scope in the coming years.
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank all the students, staff
and collaborators at the University of Western Sydney
and the University of New South Wales for their work in
some of the elements presented in this paper.
Furthermore, a special mention to Drs Hicks and Kang
from Heavy Engineering Research Australia, New
Zealand and University of Western Sydney respectively
for the work that has been carried out to develop new
calibration factors for steel beams in Australia.
Questions ?