Wood Construction

AIR provides the following codes for wood construction:

  Touchstone applies non-engineered building damage distributions to the following construction classes regardless of occupancy class, including the industrial facility (400-series) occupancy classes: 101, 102, 103, 104, 111, 112, 113, 114, 115, 173, 174, 178, 179, 261. This applies to the AIR Earthquake Model for Japan and to the AIR Earthquake Model for Canada.

 

Construction Code


Category


Description

101

Wood Frame (Modern)

Wood frame (modern) structures tend to be mostly low rise (one to three stories, occasionally four). Stud walls are typically constructed of 2x4 or 2x6 inch wood members vertically set 16 or 24 inches apart. These walls are braced by plywood or by diagonals made of wood or steel. Many detached single and low-rise multiple family residences in the United States are of stud wall wood frame construction.

102

Light Wood Frame

Light wood frame structures are typically not built in the United States but would be found in other countries, such as Japan. In Hawaii, this classification would include single wall (studless) construction framed with light timber trusses.

103

Masonry Veneer

A wood-framed structure faced with a single width of non-load-bearing concrete, stone, or clay brick attached to the stud wall.

104

Heavy Timber

Heavy Timber structures typically have masonry walls with heavy wood column supports, and floor and roof decks are 2-3 inch tongue-and-groove planks.

107

Lightweight Cladding

Non-structural cladding and linings (e.g., fiber cement, plywood) used in lightweight construction that uses timber or light gauge steel framing as the structural support system.

Currently supported only for locations in Australia and New Zealand.

108

Hale Construction

Indigenous Hawaiian construction.

Supported only for the AIR Earthquake and Tropical Cyclone models for Hawaii.

 

 


© 2019 AIR Worldwide. All rights reserved.

Touchstone 5.0 Updated July 09, 2019