Specifying Metal Fabric and Getting it Right

by Marcy Marro | October 1, 2020 12:00 am

By Dale Payne, PE

This elegant design solution using metal mesh is the high-tech Tencent Holdings Ltd. in the Chinese metropolis of Shenzhen. For the cladding of the atrium, architects from NBBJ selected 20,000 square feet of golden, stainless steel metal fabric. Key specification factors were the material’s transparency and breathtaking aesthetic.

Determine the Design Intent and Application

The goal is to determine what you need to accomplish—what are we trying to cover, clad or protect? This will help select the right weave pattern and attachment method for the application. This is also a time to consider the desired characteristics of the metal fabric product to align with the design intent. What is the overall design aesthetic and how should metal fabric contribute to that design?

Define Performance Criteria

Once the application and design intent are laid-out, performance criteria should be well defined. To specify the ideal attachment system, appropriate percent openness for perforation and the correct metal alloy, the following performance factors come into play:

Meet Building Codes and Sustainability Standards

After application, design intent and performance criteria are determined, two final considerations are to know exactly how the selected product will meet applicable building codes and fulfill any targeted sustainability standards. While sustainability standards generally remain consistent within a certain version, design load requirements vary from building to building based upon factors such as building type, location, surrounding topography and mesh height.

For example, when specifying metal fabric to mask mechanical equipment on top of an 860-foot building, ask the engineering team: What will the mesh panel reactions be at this altitude? This will help determine at the get-go whether the substructure requires reinforcement, which can lead to significant budget inflation and major schedule delays.

Avoid Pitfalls

Beyond the advice above, some common areas for mishap and specification mistakes include:


Dale Payne, PE, is chief engineer at GKD-USA Inc., Cambridge, Md. For more information about specifying architectural metal fabric and additional resources, visit www.gkdusa.com[1].

Endnotes:
  1. www.gkdusa.com: http://www.gkdusa.com

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