Beam Design Workflow

Educational workflow for beams: actions, analysis, section selection, strength checks, serviceability and documentation.

Steel beam design typically follows a multi-stage process: define loading, analyse the beam for actions (moment, shear, deflection), select a trial section, then check that section against strength and serviceability limit states. Each stage has its own set of assumptions, and errors most often arise when assumptions from one stage are carried into the next without being recorded.

This page walks through the typical workflow stages and highlights where calculator inputs require careful attention. It is written as an educational guide, not as a design procedure. The specific equations, factors, and acceptance criteria depend on the governing standard.

For the full general verification workflow (units, replication strategy, sensitivity testing, and archiving), see How to verify calculator results.

Stage 1 — Define the loading

Stage 2 — Analyse for actions

Stage 3 — Select a trial section

Stage 4 — Check strength limit states

Stage 5 — Check serviceability

Documentation

FAQ

What is the most common beam design mistake? Mixing factored and unfactored loads. If you enter factored loads into a calculator that then applies its own load factors, the beam is checked against demands that are too high (overly conservative) or the calculator may not apply factors at all (unconservative if you entered service loads expecting factors to be applied).

Should I check deflection even if strength governs? Yes. Deflection limits are serviceability requirements and must be satisfied independently of strength. A beam can pass all strength checks and still violate a deflection limit.

How do I handle lateral-torsional buckling? The unbraced length (distance between lateral restraint points) is the key input. If the beam is continuously braced (e.g., by a concrete slab), LTB does not govern. If discrete bracing exists, you must determine the unbraced length for each segment.

Does the calculator handle continuous beams? The beam analysis tools handle simply-supported and basic configurations. Multi-span continuous beams require a separate analysis to determine the moment and shear diagrams, which can then be used as inputs to the capacity checker.

Is this guide engineering advice? No. It is an educational workflow description to help organize beam design calculations. Project criteria and compliance decisions are defined by the governing standard and the engineer of record.

Related pages

Disclaimer (educational use only)

This page is provided for general technical information and educational use only. It does not constitute professional engineering advice, a design service, or a substitute for an independent review by a qualified structural engineer. Any calculations, outputs, examples, and workflows discussed here are simplified descriptions intended to support understanding and preliminary estimation.

All real-world structural design depends on project-specific factors (loads, combinations, stability, detailing, fabrication, erection, tolerances, site conditions, and the governing standard and project specification). You are responsible for verifying inputs, validating results with an independent method, checking constructability and code compliance, and obtaining professional sign-off where required.

The site operator provides the content "as is" and "as available" without warranties of any kind. To the maximum extent permitted by law, the operator disclaims liability for any loss or damage arising from the use of, or reliance on, this page or any linked tools.