Sections show crane girder, tank below ground level, and five-foot pocket for storing "warm" reactor parts. c.a. sundberg and associates

A stub-girder system (or stub girder system) is a model of steel frame structures consisting of beams and decking, originally developed in the early 1970s in part by Joseph Colaco of Ellisor Engineers Inc..[1][2]

Short lengths of stub girders the same depth as the floor beams are welded to the tops of the main girders to provide a connection to the slab.

References

  1. Colaco, Joseph P. "A Stub-Girder System for High-Rise Buildings." Technical paper presented at the AISC National Engineering Conference, New York. May 1972. Retrieved on January 20, 2009.
  2. Aguilar, Rafael; Torrealva, Daniel; Moreira, Susana; Pando, Miguel A.; Ramos, Luis F. (2018-08-18). Structural Analysis of Historical Constructions: An Interdisciplinary Approach. Springer. ISBN 978-3-319-99441-3.


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