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The Long Span Components Calculator helps structural engineers select appropriate structural systems for large-span applications. Compare joists, trusses, beams, space frames, and other systems based on span requirements, geometry, and material preferences.
Long-span structures require specialized systems to efficiently span large distances without intermediate supports. System selection depends on span length, geometry (flat, pitched, curved), loading, and architectural requirements.
Filter structural systems by span range, material (steel, wood, concrete), geometry type, and span-to-depth ratios. The calculator helps identify appropriate structural solutions for auditoriums, gymnasiums, warehouses, and other long-span applications.
Features
Everything you need
- Multiple structural system types
- Span range filtering
- Material comparison (steel, wood, concrete)
- Geometry type support
- Span-to-depth ratio guidance
- One-way and two-way systems
- Application recommendations
How it works
Simple workflow
- 1Enter required span length
- 2Select geometry type (flat, pitched, curved)
- 3Filter by material preference
- 4Review matching structural systems
- 5Compare span-to-depth ratios
Use cases
Built for real-world scenarios
Structural system selection
Identify appropriate structural systems for large-span building applications.
Preliminary design
Compare structural options during early design phases before detailed analysis.
System comparison
Evaluate different structural systems for cost, depth, and constructability.
Architectural coordination
Select structural systems that meet architectural requirements for space and geometry.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Long spans typically exceed 50-60 feet, requiring specialized structural systems. Common long-span applications: auditoriums (80-150 ft), gymnasiums (80-120 ft), warehouses (100-300 ft), aircraft hangars (200+ ft).
Span-to-depth ratio = Span ÷ Depth. Typical: Joists 24:1, Trusses 20-22:1, Beams 15-20:1, Space frames 15-20:1. Lower ratios mean deeper members but may be more efficient.
One-way systems span in one direction (joists, trusses). Two-way systems span in both directions (space frames, two-way trusses). Two-way systems are more efficient for square or near-square spans.
Steel: Longest spans, highest strength. Wood: Moderate spans, lower cost, sustainable. Concrete: Good for fire resistance, but heavier. Consider span, loading, fire requirements, and cost.
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