Glued Laminated Beam Design Tables

Glued Laminated Beam Design Tables: A Practical Guide for Structural Sizing

Glued laminated timber (glulam) beam design tables are essential tools for engineers, architects, and builders designing with engineered wood. These tables provide quick, code-recognized values for strength, stiffness, and allowable spans—making it possible to size beams efficiently while maintaining safety and performance.

Understanding how to correctly read and apply glued laminated beam design tables is critical to achieving economical, constructible, and code-compliant designs.

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What Are Glued Laminated Beam Design Tables?

Glued laminated beam design tables summarize the structural capacity of glulam members based on standardized testing and design assumptions. They eliminate the need for repetitive calculations by presenting pre-evaluated values for common loading and support conditions.

Design tables typically account for:

  • Beam size and layup
  • Material grade and appearance classification
  • Loading type and magnitude
  • Span length
  • Deflection limits
  • Support conditions

These tables are published by manufacturers or referenced in design standards and building codes.

Information Commonly Found in Glulam Design Tables

  1. Beam Sizes and Layups

Tables list standard glulam widths and depths, along with specific layups that define strength and stiffness. Different layups may be optimized for bending, axial loading, or appearance requirements.

  1. Allowable Spans or Capacities

Design tables often present:

  • Maximum allowable spans for given loads, or
  • Allowable bending moments and shear forces

The governing limit may be strength-based or deflection-based, depending on the application.

  1. Load Assumptions

Most tables are developed using assumed values for:

  • Dead load
  • Live load or snow load
  • Uniformly distributed loading

If actual project loads differ, the table may no longer apply.

  1. Deflection Criteria

Serviceability limits such as L/240, L/360, or L/480 are frequently embedded in span tables. Long-span glulam beams are often controlled by deflection rather than strength.

  1. Support and Span Conditions

Tables typically assume:

  • Simple-span beams
  • Uniform bearing conditions

Continuous spans, cantilevers, or point loads generally require additional analysis.

How to Use Glued Laminated Beam Design Tables

  1. Identify the beam application
    Determine whether the beam supports floors, roofs, or other structural elements.
  2. Determine design loads
    Establish dead loads, live loads, snow loads, and tributary widths.
  3. Select the correct table
    Use tables that match the load type, span condition, and glulam grade.
  4. Check strength and deflection
    Verify that the selected beam satisfies both bending/shear capacity and deflection limits.
  5. Verify bearing and connections
    Design tables do not replace checks for bearing length, connection capacity, or lateral stability.

Manufacturer-Specific Considerations

Glulam properties vary by manufacturer due to differences in:

  • Lumber species
  • Adhesive systems
  • Layup configurations

Design tables are product-specific and should never be interchanged unless explicitly permitted. Always confirm:

  • The exact glulam product specified
  • Compatibility with the governing building code
  • Use of the latest published tables

Limitations of Glulam Design Tables

While highly efficient, design tables have limitations:

  • They assume idealized loading and geometry
  • They may not address point loads or unusual framing conditions
  • They do not account for notching, drilling, or tapering

For complex or heavily loaded beams, full engineered calculations or software analysis may be required. CivilWeb Spreadsheets include full Glulam beam and column design software.

When to Go Beyond the Tables

Glued laminated beam design tables are best suited for typical residential and light commercial construction. Consider detailed analysis when:

  • Loads are non-uniform or concentrated
  • Spans exceed tabulated values
  • Beams are curved, cambered, or tapered
  • The structure is performance-critical or highly optimized

Final Thoughts

Glued laminated beam design tables are powerful tools that streamline structural design while maintaining reliability and safety. When used correctly—and within their stated assumptions—they allow designers to take full advantage of glulam’s strength, efficiency, and architectural versatility. Understanding both the capabilities and limitations of these tables ensures confident, well-performing designs.