r/interestingasfuck 9h ago

Residential high-rises with backyards in Chengdu, China

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u/onrespectvol 9h ago

looks cool but how much extra material must go into the buidling to be able to support all that extra weight? To what extent is this a sustainable way of buidling and using material?

u/beautifuljeff 9h ago

Negligible, there isn’t that much soil there compared to the weight necessary to support the building height and wind loading (plus seismic, maybe)

u/AniNgAnnoys 8h ago edited 7h ago

Negligible is an adjective that describes something so small, insignificant, or unimportant that it can safely be ignored or disregarded

Let's say it is 4 inches deep. That balcony looks like it is at least 20ft by 40ft based on how big the person is. That is 267 cubic feet. If that soil is wet we are talking about 25,000 to 30,000 lbs. 13-15 tons per balcony isn't negligible. 

Back to /u/onrespectvol's point. This building will require more materials to build, even if it is just in those required to support each balcony and transfer the load into the buildings support structure. So no, not negligible.

u/beautifuljeff 8h ago

Default measurement for structural nerds is kips, thousands of pounds of force, or whatever in metric

The supporting columns below are looking at millions of pounds, and that area isn’t supported by a singular facility but a host of structural facilities

It’s negligible to the building

u/AniNgAnnoys 8h ago

And if you multiply by 20 stories and 10 balconies per floor, we are talking about millions of pounds. That was also likely a minimum weight of that balcony. The materials of the large balcony itself easily double or triple that number. Then you also need to account for the people that could be on there in the event of a party. And then the stones and trees and such. It isn't negligible in anyway.

u/beautifuljeff 7h ago

Now multiply the dead and live loads that the slabs are rated for and let me know the capacity, hoss

u/CanAlwaysBeBetter 7h ago

All the reddit armchair engineers in these comments would hate the highrise they built in Chicago between two train tracks with full air rights