Make an Informed Choice with Clopay's Windcode™ Commercial Door Reinforcement Calculator
When it comes to building safety, ensuring your structure can withstand strong winds is crucial. This is especially true for commercial buildings, where a garage door damaged by strong winds can compromise inventory and equipment. But how do you learn to choose the right door for your specific needs?
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Understanding Wind Loads on Commercial Buildings
Wind is a powerful force of nature, and its impact on buildings and structures can be significant. High winds can push a building’s design to its limits, applying tremendous pressure that can potentially cause damage to roofs, walls, and yes, even garage doors. A garage door is the largest potential breach point of a structure. Winds entering through a failed garage door can blow out doors, windows, walls, and the roof of the structure. Winds entering the garage can also cause structural damage to the rest of the building. Selecting the proper wind-loaded door helps protect the entire structure, by increasing its performance against high winds.
For commercial buildings, a garage door compromised by strong winds can have devastating consequences. Imagine a hurricane-force wind ripping through your warehouse, damaging your inventory and equipment. The business disruption and financial losses could be overwhelming.
Here's the key: not all winds are created equal. The geographic location of your building plays a major role in determining the wind forces it will experience. Areas prone to hurricanes or tornadoes will naturally face more extreme wind conditions compared to regions with milder climates. This is why local building codes start with MPH requirements, which is one variable in determining the wind load pressures a structure needs to withstand to ensure proper performance of your garage door.
The overall size and layout of your building also influence the wind pressures acting on your garage door. For instance, a long and narrow building will experience wind differently compared to a more square-shaped structure. Also, the presence of large, open spaces within the building can create wind tunnels that exert additional pressure on specific areas, including your garage door.
The Importance of Wind Load Calculators
With all these factors in mind, choosing the right commercial garage door requires an informed approach accounting for multiple variables. A wind load calculator is an important tool for building owners, builders, designers, architects, and building code officials. Such calculators can be used to factor in multiple variables such as a building's location, height, size, and shape to figure out the wind force a garage door will most likely experience. By assessing the variables, a calculator can help inform the maximum wind pressures a garage door can handle during strong winds and storms.
For building owners, architects, and builders, wind load calculators inform garage doors compliance with local building codes. By using a wind load calculator, you can design garage doors for high winds. And choosing the right door during the planning stages of a new build can also prevent construction delays.
Introducing Clopay's Windcode™ Commercial Door Calculator
Clopay's Windcode™ Calculator offers a comprehensive and user-friendly approach to selecting a commercial garage door. This unique door ID program goes beyond basic wind load calculations by considering a multitude of factors specific to your building, including:
- Local Building Codes: The most common building codes are included.**
- MPH Requirements: By factoring in your region's maximum wind speeds, the calculator helps determine the necessary door strength for optimal protection.
- Exposure Level: Whether your building is in an open field, a city center, or near a coastline, the calculator considers the surrounding exposure.
- Roof Height and Angle: The calculator considers the height and angle of your building's roof to determine the wind uplift pressure acting on your garage door.
- Opening Width and Height: The size of your door opening is factored into the equation to ensure the door can withstand the wind forces.
- Building Dimensions: The overall size and layout of your building are also considered to provide a more accurate assessment of wind pressure distribution and its impact.
- Design Pressure (PSF): The output of the Windcode calculator is expressed as Design Pressure (PSF), both positive and negative. This is displayed as Allowable Strength Design.
Peace of Mind with the Right Door
Don't settle for a one-size-fits-all approach when selecting a commercial garage door. Clopay's Windcode™ Commercial Door Calculator uses local building codes, MPH requirements, exposure levels, mean roof height, roof angle, opening dimensions, and building dimensions to calculate the ideal Windcode® door. The result is a commercial garage door built to withstand the specific wind forces your structure will face.
Explore Clopay's Windcode™ Calculator today and discover the perfect door from Clopay's extensive range of high-quality, durable commercial door solutions.
**The output from the WindCode™ Calculator (the “output”) provided on this website is approximate in nature, intended for preliminary design purposes only, and dependent on the accuracy of the information you provide. Please note that the local building official is the final determiner of the suitability of an installed garage door and its connections to any particular structure. Clopay Corporation offers no warranty or representation – express or implied – that use of the output will result in approval by the applicable governing building code body. Accordingly, users of any output from this website assume all liability arising from such use.
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Protect Your Building with Clopay WindCode Doors
WindCode Door Drawings for Commercial Doors
Clopay has windload product drawings for each of its Residential and Commercial WindCode® door models.
Information about the door sections, horizontal reinforcement, door hardware (e.g. hinges), track, and pressures is included with the windload drawing.
Each drawing also includes information regarding how the jambs are to be attached to ensure that the windload pressure on the sectional doors is successfully transmitted to the building’s structure. However, a licensed architect or building engineer is responsible for designing the supporting structure to resist windloads - not the dealer, subcontractor or manufacturer.
Commercial Garage Doors
Use the drop down menu below to choose a commercial door model. All WindCode® drawings pertaining to that specific model will be listed. Click on the file name to view the drawing.
Please select Enforcing Body Code