Connection Wednesdays – Battersea Power Station (London)

    Date de webinaire:

  • 2019-05-29T00:00:00.0000000Z
    (en votre temps local, format 24 heures)

Rejoignez le webinaire pour savoir plus de

  • How to quickly design and check steel connections
  • Avoiding modeling mistakes
  • Different approaches to using operations
  • BIM workflows with CAE/CAD programs
  • Minimizing the risks of structural defects

Lecteurs

Theodore Tsirozidis
Theodore Tsirozidis Director
IDEA StatiCa UK
Costis Hatzopoulos
Costis Hatzopoulos Support Manager
IDEA StatiCa UK
IDEA StatiCa Connection helped in the redevelopment of Battersea Power Station in London, by code-checking complex joints such as this footing from the high-level temporary roadway.

Applied Engineering Design (AED), a pioneering Scottish engineering design specialist with offices in Edinburgh and Bath, has used IDEA StatiCa in Battersea Power Station – one of the biggest regeneration projects in Europe and an iconic landmark on London’s riverbank. AED has been tasked with creating a high-level temporary roadway at the site which is capable of carrying heavy construction traffic. Once its use as a site connection is finished, the structural beams and columns will be encased in concrete, and flats will be built on top of the deck.
Learn more about Applied Engineering Design (AED).

Tim Hetherington, Director of AED, said:

“It is a particularly complex commission and we have become early adopters of IDEA StatiCa because its advanced design and check process is both powerful and quick enough to be a useful tool in our everyday work as structural engineers for fabricators. I had become aware of the limitations of commonplace software and I had been looking for an alternative”.

In the first part of the webinar, we focused on design and code-check of a complex steel joint for the footing of the high-level temporary roadway. 

Complex base plate with rebars passing through

In the second part, we showcased one of our  HelpDesk Highlights – multiple shear planes in bolted plates. 

Multiple shear planes in bolted plates

Webinar recording