Don1357
Well-known member
I'm in the outskirts of a town in Alaska. I don't really need permits or inspections. What I really could use is a structural engineer to do a sanity check on what I want to do. I have never used one so I'm not sure if they are willing to do a consultation based on loose plans or if they only certify full plans.
I'm doing a 1 1/2 story workshop on a 24x36 slab, 2x6 framing. First floor with 10' ceiling, second floor a 3.5' knee wall with an open 10/12 roof with collar ties on the top 1/3rd (for wind load). Because of the open trusses I'm planning on two columns down the middle of the building 12' apart to support the roof weight. The construction type will be balloon, as only 2/3rds of the second story will have a floor (last third will be open for the eventual car lift) and the balloon construction allows me to stuff more insulation than regular stick framing. The seismic zone is D2, wind load is 110 mph with a wind exposure B, and 40 lb snow load. I'm doing the paper math for ceiling and floor joists but I have no practical experience with most of this so I would like to hire some expertize to save me from myself.
So far I had the insulated slab poured last year with 3 runs of PEX. I'm about to start two courses of 6x8x16 cinder blocks. Once I'm done then the framing can begin, provided I can sort out what I need to do
I'm doing a 1 1/2 story workshop on a 24x36 slab, 2x6 framing. First floor with 10' ceiling, second floor a 3.5' knee wall with an open 10/12 roof with collar ties on the top 1/3rd (for wind load). Because of the open trusses I'm planning on two columns down the middle of the building 12' apart to support the roof weight. The construction type will be balloon, as only 2/3rds of the second story will have a floor (last third will be open for the eventual car lift) and the balloon construction allows me to stuff more insulation than regular stick framing. The seismic zone is D2, wind load is 110 mph with a wind exposure B, and 40 lb snow load. I'm doing the paper math for ceiling and floor joists but I have no practical experience with most of this so I would like to hire some expertize to save me from myself.
So far I had the insulated slab poured last year with 3 runs of PEX. I'm about to start two courses of 6x8x16 cinder blocks. Once I'm done then the framing can begin, provided I can sort out what I need to do

