Timber iQ June - July 2017 // Issue: 32 | Page 45

FEATURES Specifying for timber construction When specifying for timber construction, it is imperative to make a thorough study of elements, such as specific designs, site conditions, the National Building Regulations as well as timber quality, to ensure a successful project. The Institute for Timber Construction South Africa (ITC-SA) weighs in. When specifying for timber construction, it is imperative to make a thorough study of elements, such as specific designs, site conditions, the National Building Regulations as well as timber quality, to ensure a successful project. Image: ITC-SA I n South Africa, under the Building Standards Act (Act 103/1977 as amended) and the National Building Regulations (NBR), the only legal methods by which to design and construct timber structures, are as follows: • Timber framed structures built in accordance with SANS 10082 – Code of Practice for Timber Buildings. This Code of Practice outlines the ‘deemed to satisfy’ requirements for the design and construction of timber framed structures. • Timber roof trusses manufactured in accordance with Part L Roofs of SANS 10400 ‘The Application of the National Building Regulations’. This standard outlines the ‘deemed to satisfy’ requirements for nailed and bolted trusses and specifies timber sizes along with the number of nails and bolts as well as the accepted truss shape. • By engaging the services of a professional engineer (as required in Part B of the National Building Regulations) who would work in strict accordance with SANS 10160 ‘Loading Code’ and SANS 10163 ‘The Structural Use of Timber’. // JUNE / JULY 2017 43