The Cork Airport Roof
The Cork Airport Roof
The Cork Airport Roof
Bakala, C & Harris, R 2008, 'The Cork Airport Roof', Paper presented at 10th World Conference of Timber
Engineering, Miyazaki, Japan, 2/06/08 - 5/06/08.
Publication date:
2008
Document Version
Publisher's PDF, also known as Version of record
Link to publication
University of Bath
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1. Introduction
1.1 History of Cork Airport
Cork Airport was founded by the Irish Government in 1957. Passenger numbers traveling through
Cork Airport had been increasing steadily during the 1980’s and 1990’s. Figures in the late 1990’s
were showing that throughput had started to escalate more rapidly than originally envisaged and the
Airport Authority realised that investment in Cork Airport was needed immediately. As a result, the
Airport Authority commissioned a masterplan to examine redevelopment through to 2010. The
Masterplan reviewed all aspects of Cork Airport infrastructure and recommended a phased terminal
development. This included the construction of a new terminal building. Jacobs was appointed in
April 2001 to take forward the masterplan and develop a design brief and planning application.
HOK were appointed as Specialist Aviation Consultants and Buro Happold as Specialist Structural
Consultants for the New Terminal Building Roof.
Lateral stability is achieved through moment resisting frame action, or portal action to carry load
down to the concrete structure. In the direction parallel to the bowstring beams, it is the beams and
tree columns that act as a double portal, partially fixed at the base of the tree branches, while in the
longitudinal direction steel beams concealed above the metal ceiling working with the tree branches
achieve stability through portal action. The portals are fixed to the supporting RC columns by semi
rigid connections. The end result is a building containing two movement joints running
continuously in the eastwest direction intersecting with the service cores and separating the roof
into three independent and self supporting structures
3.3.2 Material Selection
At concept stage materials were selected on the basis of engineering efficiency as well as aesthetic
appeal and sustainable credentials. The roof structure is a series of twin Glulam beams (215mm
wide x 1035mm deep), which cross the building in two spans of 40 metres.
3.3.3 Design Loads
Several hundred load cases were investigated in respect of anticipated conditions of service for
ultimate and serviceability limit states.
The roof is intended to be a lightweight cover protecting the terminal from the elements and in this
respect is meant to be as light as practicable. But under high wind loads the potential exists for
uplift effects of wind suction to exceed the dead load due to gravity. Under conditions of uplift, the
compression in the timber is greatly reduced and small compressions will be present in the steel tie
rods, so the rods are also designed to withstand those small compressions, with restraint provided
by the compression struts.
From the very early days of scheme design we concerned ourselves with developing a solution that
took into account the erection of the roof structure (Fig. 9).
Ultimately, the Contractor chose an erection sequence that matched the one we envisaged using
similar methods Fig. 10,11), but the specification required the Contractor to develop the detailed
erection method as it was his expertise, operatives and equipment which ultimately were
responsible for the successful erection of the roof structure.
Fig. 12 Finished Building
4. References
[1] Dahdouh S; Bakkala C. “Cork Airport Terminal Development” Engineers Ireland 25/05/2006