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The Structural Engineer, Volume 68, Issue 4, 1990
This greatest structural and architectural achievement of the long-lived Byzantine Empire has long inspired awe and presented a challenge to later builders. Its secularisation by Ataturk after almost 1400 years as church and then mosque allowed a precise, detailed survey to be undertaken. This furnished a secure basis for looking behind the early accounts and later legends of its design and construction in search of a fuller understanding. The investigation and the principal conclusions are here outlined, and the paper ends with some comments on the relevance of 6th-century design to current practice. R.J. Mainstone
Mr A. C. G. Hayward (F) (Cass Hayward & Partners) The authors argue the pros and cons of permissible stress or limit state Codes and note that designs compare closely. This, of course, was a deliberate policy when the limit state Codes were written, the values of partial factor being fixed so that the overall safety of common structures under the then prevalent loading remained the same. Thus, the changed philosophy of the new Codes would at least start from a common base of experience. When the loading is changed (e.g. resulting from the recent increase in highway bridge loading discussed by the authors), differences in designs under the Codes may become evident.
The ultimate strength of plate girders with perforated webs under shearing and bending is investigated. The girders considered are transversely stiffened panels with aspect ratios (b/d) between 0.7 and 1.5. The holes in the webs are centrally located and they are of circular, rectangular and elongated shapes. The ultimate strength is determined using a theoretical model developed on the basis of stress fields and loading-carrying mechanism observed experimentally from test results and numerically from finite element calculations simplified to allow for the variation in panel and hole size. The predictions obtained from the theory are compared with experimental and numerical results available, and it is found that the theory provides reasonably accurate estimates. M.M.K. Lee