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Title: Abstract


1
Wind Loads on Single-Family Dwellings in Suburban
Terrain Comparing Field Data and Wind Tunnel
Simulation
P.L. Datina, Z. Liua, D.O. Prevatta, K. Gurleyb,
F.J. Mastersc, and T.A. Reinholdd Departments of
Civil Engineering at Clemson Universitya,
University of Floridab and Florida International
Universityc and the Institute for Business and
Home Safetyd, Tampa, FL
Wind Tunnel Testing
Abstract
House Instrumentation
  • Components and cladding on residential structures
    continue to be damaged in high winds despite
    improvements to building codes. Modern wind
    design codes that are helping to prevent
    structural damage to buildings are not as
    effective in preventing building envelope
    failures. Since 1998, a unique collaborative
    effort between Clemson University, the University
    of Florida, and Florida International University
    called the Florida Coastal Monitoring Program
    (FCMP), has been collecting full-scale pressure
    and wind speed data on residential buildings in
    suburban areas. The objectives of the FCMP are
  • To increase our limited full-scale data available
    on wind loadings of low-rise buildings none of
    which was obtained from hurricanes until this
    project.
  • To determine the validity of current design code
    values that are based on open-country derived
    pressures.
  • The issues highlighted above serve as the primary
    motivation to study pressure variation on roofs
    of suburban houses.
  • Wind loads in modern building codes are based on
    boundary layer wind tunnel model studies
    conducted in flows that simulate the
    characteristics of winds associated with the
    passage of frontal systems. Questions are
    continually raised concerning the validity of
    these simulations for hurricane wind events.
  • The FCMP employs a unique system using pressure
    sensors mounted on pre-selected houses that
    collect wind pressure data on the roofs of
    occupied residential structures along the Florida
    and Carolina coastlines. There are 32 homes in
    Florida participating in the FCMP and six more in
    the Carolinas. Each house is has pressure
    sensors installed on the building envelope (roof,
    walls, soffit) arrayed in areas that experience
    the highest wind suctions.
  • Until the success of the FCMP in 2004, wind load
    data for residential structures subjected to
    sustained hurricane level winds has been
    virtually
  • All wind tunnel studies were conducted in the
    atmospheric boundary layer wind tunnel at the
    Wind Load Test Facility (WLTF) of Clemson
    University. The upwind terrain used for this
    study was modeled to simulate suburban terrain at
    a 150 scale. Pressure taps are located where
    the actual sensors on the house are located and
    they are also concentrated in the worst loaded
    critical zones near the eaves and ridge corners
    of the roof.

Figure 3 Instrumented house for collecting
full-scale wind pressures. Clockwise from left
Instrumented house with pressure sensors and
computer box wiring under the eaves computer
box installed pressure sensors
FCMP Deployment Record
Figure 7 Wind tunnel arrangement for 150
suburban terrain
non-existent. Consequently, there was very
little basis for supporting or modifying existing
wind load estimates for buildings in hurricanes.
The FCMP collected data in all four landfalling
2004 hurricanes, including roof pressure data
sets on 16 houses. Six of these houses were
subjected to sustained hurricane level winds, a
first in experimental wind engineering.
  • This wind tunnel pressure data is then analyzed
    and converted to pressure coefficient (GCp)
    values normalized to 3-second gust wind speed at
    mean roof height. As a result, a direct
    comparison between the full-scale results and
    wind tunnel data can be made.

Introduction
  • The current ASCE 7 wind design procedure ASCE
    7-02 effectively assumes that one set of
    pressure coefficients for components and cladding
    systems can be used regardless of the wind
    exposure. For buildings located in a suburban
    area that qualifies as exposure B for all wind
    directions, the wind loads will be calculated
    using the same set of pressure coefficients as
    those used for exposure C locations, but the
    design loads will be 20 45 lower because of
    the lower design wind speeds in exposure B.
    Recent field measurements of wind loads on a
    house subjected to tropical storm winds in
    suburban settings and subsequent boundary layer
    wind tunnel model studies question the validity
    of this approach.
  • Central to the FCMP effort is the collection of
    full-scale high-fidelity data sets of the
    turbulent wind behavior near ground at multiple
    locations within a storms path. The three main
    goals of the program are
  • To measure in-field hurricane wind velocities
    using portable instrumentation that can be placed
    in the path of the storm.
  • To measure the resultant pressures on residential
    structures through instrumented houses and
    evaluate the effectiveness of inexpensive
    retrofit measures
  • To compare the full-scale pressure with the
    results of wind tunnel tests.

Figure 8 150 scale model of FL-27
Figure 2 FCMP instrumented houses in FL
Results
Full-Scale Data
  • Wind speed data is available on the FCMP website
    in near real-time at www.ce.ufl.edu/fcmp as the
    storm comes ashore. This data includes 10Hz
    sampling rate, 15-minute mean wind speed, and
    3-second gust wind speed.
  • A wind tunnel test was conducted on an FCMP house
    (FL-27) located in the panhandle of Florida that
    was hit by Tropical Storm Isidore. Current
    testing is being done on this same house that was
    hit by Hurricane Ivan (2004). The peak 3-second
    gust wind speed measured in Tropical Storm
    Isidore at FL-27 was about 40 mph at a wind
    direction of 135. Pressure coefficients were
    determined from both the full-scale results and
    the wind tunnel analysis.
  • The results showed that there is positive
    agreement between the average values of the RMS
    pressure coefficients for the full-scale tests
    and wind tunnel results, indicated in Figure 9 by
    the linear regression analysis indicating a small
    offset between the slope of the line y x and
    the slope of the comparative study. This change
    in slope is minimal, which suggests that the
    fluctuations in pressures are faithfully
    reproduced in the model study. There also
    appeared to be a shift in the full-scale pressure
    coefficients for all the pressure taps, which may
    be due to errors in temperature measurement or
    barometric pressures.
  • Establishing a reference pressure for the full
    scale results was difficult, however once
    adjustments were made by matching the maximum and
    mean pressure coefficients (Cp) between
    full-scale and the wind tunnel models, it was
    found that the wind tunnel results consistently
    underestimate the peak minimum Cp values as
    compared to the full-scale values (Figure 10).

Figure 9 Linear regression analysis of
full-scale vs. model RMS Cp values
Tower Deployment
Figure 4 Typical wind speed summary available
on the FCMP website
Figure 5 FCMP Homepage at www.ce.ufl.edu/fcmp
Summary
When a storm approaches land, teams from CU, UF,
and FIU travel to meet the inbound hurricane with
specially designed portable equipment in tow on
trailers. Each of the six trailers unfolds into
a stiff 10 m (30 ft) tall tower designed to
withstand 200 mph gusts. These trailers are
placed in the hurricanes path
  • The wind speed information, shown in Figure 6,
    provided wind speeds from Hurricane Ivan
    collected by different groups and is used by
    other researchers and engineers to determine
    failure loads during the storms, as well as to
    better understand the degradation of wind speed
    in a landfalling hurricane.
  • In 2004, the Florida Coastal Monitoring Program
    has provided, for the first time, high resolution
    full-scale uplift pressure data on the roofs of
    real, occupied residential structures
    experiencing sustained hurricane force winds, a
    first for wind engineering research.
  • The dataset now includes several houses that
    experienced more than one storm, allowing future
    comparisons of the effects of storm intensity and
    other characteristics on measured Cp values.
  • The tower and house data provide the first direct
    measure of the wind speed/load/damage chain, and
    it has laid the groundwork for effective
    mitigation.
  • several hours before impact. Each tower is
    outfitted with multiple sensors and a data
    acquisition system that measure
  • Wind velocities at 5-meter elevation with 3-axis
    gill anemometers
  • Wind velocities at 10-meter elevation with vane
    and 3-axis gill anemometers
  • Average width of turbulent gusts
  • Temperature
  • Barometric pressure
  • Rate of rainfall
  • Relative humidity

Figure 10 FL-27 house results full-scale vs.
model scale (adjusted) pressure coefficients
Acknowledgement
Future Work
The authors would like to acknowledge the
generous support of the Department of Civil
Engineering at Clemson University, the Florida
Department of Community Affairs, FEMA, NOAA, the
SC and FL Sea Grant Consortia, and the Institute
for Business and Home Safety.
  • Validation of full-scale results through
    additional tests.
  • Wind tunnel and full-scale comparisons of Cp
    values.
  • Develop turbulence intensity relationships to
    pressures.

Figure 1 FCMP portable 10-meter tower
The towers also have the ability to provide the
wind data in near real-time to a public access
website (www.ce.ufl.edu/fcmp).
Figure 6 Measured wind speeds during Hurricane
Ivan (2004) converted to 3-second gust at
10-meters
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