1995
DOI: 10.1016/0925-7535(94)00035-2
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Human induced loading of flexible staircases

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Cited by 26 publications
(28 citation statements)
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“…Accordingly, it is recommended for assessment of vibration serviceability of stairs to use the criterion for indoor footbridges as the most closely related to stairs. And, Bishop et al [2] suggested the vibration serviceability criteria on one pedestrian walking load based on the measurements on four steel staircases in existing buildings. Their suggested criteria modified the base perception curve for vertical vibration in the BS6472 [9] by multiplying the factor R, 32 for light use (offices) and 24 for heavy use (public buildings and stadia).…”
Section: Serviceability Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Accordingly, it is recommended for assessment of vibration serviceability of stairs to use the criterion for indoor footbridges as the most closely related to stairs. And, Bishop et al [2] suggested the vibration serviceability criteria on one pedestrian walking load based on the measurements on four steel staircases in existing buildings. Their suggested criteria modified the base perception curve for vertical vibration in the BS6472 [9] by multiplying the factor R, 32 for light use (offices) and 24 for heavy use (public buildings and stadia).…”
Section: Serviceability Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The vibration serviceability criteria provided by the American Institute of Steel Construction [1] and Bishop et al [2] were used to evaluate the vibration serviceability of stair systems because the other relevant codes such as ISO 2631-2 [7] and Guidelines for the Evaluation of Habitability to Building Vibration by Architectural Institute of Japan [8] provide criteria only for office and residential buildings while the AISC provides criteria for offices and residential buildings, indoor footbridges, and outdoor footbridges. Since stairs are generally not occupied for long periods of time it is not reasonable to use the criteria for offices and residential buildings [1].…”
Section: Serviceability Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This value is divided by a baseline RMS value set out in both the ISO 10137:2007 and BS 6472-1:2008 for a given frequency, which corresponds to the threshold value of human perception of vibration. The resulting response factor can then be compared against the limiting multiplying factors of 24 for heavy use and 32 for light use staircases (Bishop et al (1995)).…”
Section: Vibration Of Stairsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Staircases experience much higher loads than the floors in general and a fast stair decent can normally be assumed with a footfall rate of between 3 and 4 per second and even up to 4.5 footfalls per second (Bishop et al (1995)). Kerr and Bishop (2001) showed that only the first two harmonics of walking activity induced on stairs need to be considered, and proposed the corresponding Fourier coefficients.…”
Section: Vibration Of Stairsmentioning
confidence: 99%