J. Stanley Rabun, PhD, PE, NCARB, is a registered engineer and registered architect and Professor of Architecture
at the University of Tennessee in Knoxville. He has taught courses in historic preservation, preservation technology,
and architectural structures for more than twenty years. A respected consulting architect and structural engineer,
Professor Rabun was recently presented with a prestigious research award from Architecture magazine.
Review
"...this book offers a wealth of information..."
--Journal of Architectural Conservation, November 2001
Wiley Publishing Web Site, December, 2003
Summary
Structural Analysis of Historic Buildings offers the most' complete, detailed, and authentic data available
on the materials, calculation methods, and design techniques used by architects and engineers of the nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries. It provides today's building professionals with information needed to analyze, modify,
and certify historic buildings for modern use. Among the many important features of this book not available in
any other single volume are:
More than 350 line drawings and diagrams taken directly from original sources such as the Carnegie Steele Company's
Pocket Companion (1893) and Frank Kidder's The Architect's and Builder's Pocketbook (1902)
Hard-to-find data on period structural components, such as cast-iron columns and beams, wrought-iron columns
and beams, and fireproof terra cotta floor arches
Methods for determining what kind of loads structural components were originally designed to bear and methods
to determine if they are still capable of performing as intended
Extensive coverage of historical foundation systems and empirical design methods for load-bearing masonry buildings
For any building professional involved in the rapidly growing field of restoring, preserving, and adapting historic
buildings, Structural Analysis of Historic Buildings is an invaluable structural handbook.
Table of Contents
Assessment Methodology: Material Chronology, Early Building Laws, and Loads.
Foundation Systems of American Historic Buildings.
Historic American Building Systems: Walls and Columns.
Historic American Floor Systems -- Beams.
Historic American Roof Systems: Lateral Bracing of Buildings.
The Historic Material Assessment.
Bibliography.
Index.