Product category:
Steel and Structural Frames
News Release from: Metsec | Subject: Tapered roof trusses
Edited by the Buildingtalk Editorial
Team on 31 August 2007
Metsec key role in affordable homes
development
Lattice Joists Division has produced and supplied tapered roof trusses for a four-storey apartment block at a showcase Park Central project.
Metsec is playing a key role at a prestigious affordable homes development, in Birmingham The cold roll-formed steel manufacturer's Lattice Joists Division has produced and supplied tapered roof trusses for a four-storey apartment block at a showcase Park Central project
This article was originally published on Buildingtalk on 31 Aug 2007 at 8.00am (UK)
Related stories
Metsec adds value with design service
Added value through its in-house design service is one reason why Metsec's light gauge galvanised steel zed roof purlins have been specified for the Brigg County Primary School project.
Metsec makes 35m span lightweight lattice trusses
Metsec has supplied 33 lightweight steel lattice trusses, each spanning 35m, for a new manufacturing plant for Milbank Floors in Norfolk.
The trusses will sit atop precast load bearing walls erected by building systems manufacturer Structherm.
The two companies have already worked together at developer Crest Nicholson's Park Central scheme, which is making affordable new homes available to qualifying buyers as part of the Government's new First Time Buyer Initiative.
As part of the Lattice Joist Division's free, in-house design service, Metsec designers - using StruCad 3D modelling software - worked closely with Gardner Stewart Architects to develop roof support steelwork ahead of producing the trusses and delivering them to the site.
This pre-production work also helped provide solutions for the V-shaped roof, which features a curved cantilever, and a complicated valley condition where the two roof sections join.
The 530 square metre roof was supported on Metsec trusses, which comprised mostly 10.8m spans, tapering from 300mm deep to 1,625mm.
The trusses were spaced at 3.435m to carry a metal, structural roof deck system, with approximately 1m long cantilever ends to the top and bottom of the slope.
The trusses were supplied painted, with cantilever feature steel supplied hot dipped galvanised.
Lattice Joist Division sales director Darren Bird said: "We're developing something of a partnership with Structherm, where it provides the shell, and we put the lid on it.
"That, coupled with the fact that we are able to produce and supply the required lightweight, long-span trusses, backed with a free design and detailing service, means that together we're able to give developers like Crest Nicholson exactly what they want".
Crest Nicholson is a leading developer of sustainable communities whose mission is to meet customers' expectations through the provision of environmentally sensitive and well-built developments.
Manufactured from high yield steel, Metsec's lightweight lattice joists and trusses offer a high strength to weight ratio, and their open web nature allows for the simple passage of services.
They are supplied finished with zinc phosphate primer as standard, with other finishes available on request.".
• Metsec: contact details and other news
• Email this article to a colleague
• Register for the free Buildingtalk email newsletter
• Buildingtalk Home Page

