Wind Load Workflow

Educational guide for wind pressure estimation and documenting assumptions: exposure, height, coefficients, internal pressure.

Wind loading is one of the most parameter-sensitive inputs in structural design. Small changes in terrain category, building height, or pressure coefficient can shift the design wind pressure by 20-50%. Unlike gravity loads (which are relatively stable), wind loads depend on geographic location, surrounding terrain, building geometry, and internal pressure assumptions — all of which require explicit documentation.

This page outlines the typical wind load estimation workflow and highlights where assumptions need to be recorded. It is written as an educational guide, not as a wind engineering procedure.

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

Step 1 — Establish the basic wind speed

Step 2 — Select terrain and exposure category

Step 3 — Determine height and geometry factors

Step 4 — Apply pressure coefficients

Step 5 — Documentation and sensitivity

FAQ

Why do different wind calculators give such different results? The most common reasons are: different wind speed averaging intervals (3-second gust vs 10-minute mean), different terrain/exposure classifications, and different internal pressure assumptions. Always check that these parameters match before comparing results.

What is the difference between ASCE 7 and AS/NZS 1170.2 wind speeds? ASCE 7 uses 3-second gust speeds, while AS/NZS 1170.2 uses regional wind speeds with specific multipliers. The numerical values are not directly comparable without conversion. Do not mix wind speed values between different standards.

Should I use the simplified or the full wind procedure? Most codes offer a simplified procedure for low-rise, regular buildings. If the building is tall, has an unusual shape, is in a special terrain condition, or requires cladding design pressures, the full analytical or wind-tunnel procedure is more appropriate.

Does the calculator handle directional wind analysis? The basic calculator applies wind from the most critical direction. Directional analysis (reducing pressure based on wind direction probabilities) is a more advanced technique that requires additional data and is not included in the simplified tool.

Is this guide engineering advice? No. It is an educational description of the wind load estimation workflow. Wind loading determination for a real project must follow the governing standard and should be performed by a qualified engineer.

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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.