I am wondering if you cut all 4 sides and the top off of a standard 40' conex shipping container.
Would the floor have any strength as a walking bridge over a creek?
Is there really any strength added to the floor by the 2"x2" square tube running on top above the walls and the 16 guage wavy sides?
George
senjohnblutarsky
Oct 12, 17 3:15 pm
Leaving part of the sides would probably give it a bit more load capacity. You might need to weld in some stabilizing elements to keep the sides from collapsing.
Wilma Buttfit
Oct 12, 17 3:18 pm
No, you can't cut out all 4 sides.
Non Sequitur
Oct 12, 17 3:27 pm
Why not just build a wood & steel bridge if you're going to cut 83% out of the container?
randomised
Oct 12, 17 4:13 pm
Just open the doors on either side and you have yourself a bridge tunnel or tunnel bridge, duh.
Everyday Architect
Oct 12, 17 4:20 pm
Just to be pedantic about it, you're talking about adaptive reuse of a shipping container, not recycling it ... carry on.
AdrianFGA
Oct 16, 17 1:14 pm
@georgeberz
That's a question you should ask a civil engineer.
If you use only the container floor as a bridge, it may not be strong enough for this purpose. A lot of the structural capacity would have come from the side walls loosely acting as girders.
There are factors to consider like - maximum live load - pedestrians only or occasional light vehicles? a finished surface which will add kN to the dead load; final span; abutment type and anchoring; are parapets required or not; etc.
I suggest you post this question on an engineering forum:
I am wondering if you cut all 4 sides and the top off of a standard 40' conex shipping container.
Would the floor have any strength as a walking bridge over a creek?
Is there really any strength added to the floor by the 2"x2" square tube running on top above the walls and the 16 guage wavy sides?
George
Leaving part of the sides would probably give it a bit more load capacity. You might need to weld in some stabilizing elements to keep the sides from collapsing.
No, you can't cut out all 4 sides.
Why not just build a wood & steel bridge if you're going to cut 83% out of the container?
Just open the doors on either side and you have yourself a bridge tunnel or tunnel bridge, duh.
Just to be pedantic about it, you're talking about adaptive reuse of a shipping container, not recycling it ... carry on.
@georgeberz
That's a question you should ask a civil engineer.
If you use only the container floor as a bridge, it may not be strong enough for this purpose. A lot of the structural capacity would have come from the side walls loosely acting as girders.
There are factors to consider like - maximum live load - pedestrians only or occasional light vehicles? a finished surface which will add kN to the dead load; final span; abutment type and anchoring; are parapets required or not; etc.
I suggest you post this question on an engineering forum:
http://www.eng-tips.com/
http://www.efunda.com/forum/fo...
https://www.engineersedge.com/...