Load Calculation
Load calculation is the engineering process of determining the forces acting on structural elements and designing adequate support to safely carry those loads.
Load calculations quantify all forces acting on structural elements—dead loads (permanent weight of materials), live loads (occupants and furniture), snow loads (for roofs), and wind loads. Structural engineers use these calculations to specify appropriate beam sizes, column dimensions, footing sizes, and connection details. Calculations account for load paths—how forces transfer through the structure to the foundation and ground. Computer modeling has simplified complex calculations, but professional engineering ensures safety and code compliance.
Why It Matters for Your Project
Removing load-bearing walls requires load calculations to size replacement beams properly. Undersized beams sag, bounce, crack drywall, or fail catastrophically. Oversized beams waste money and may be unnecessary bulky. In Denver, snow load calculations are critical—roof systems must support 30-50 pounds per square foot of snow depending on location and elevation. Deck load calculations ensure safe support for occupancy and avoid collapse. Building departments require engineer-stamped calculations for many structural modifications.
Common Calculation Scenarios
- Beam sizing when removing load-bearing walls
- Foundation design for additions and new homes
- Roof structure sizing for snow and wind loads
- Deck ledger and post sizing for elevated decks
- Retaining wall design for soil pressure resistance
- Floor system sizing for spans and live load requirements
Related Terms
Load-Bearing Wall
A load-bearing wall is a structural wall that carries the weight of the structure above it, transferring loads from the roof, floors, and other building elements down to the foundation.
LVL Beam (Laminated Veneer Lumber)
LVL beam is an engineered lumber product manufactured by bonding thin wood veneers with adhesive under heat and pressure, creating exceptionally strong beams for long spans and heavy loads.
Snow Load Rating
Snow load rating is the structural capacity of roof systems to support the weight of accumulated snow and ice, specified in pounds per square foot based on local climate data.
