Tekla Structural: Designer [exclusive]
To a client, this is gibberish. To a contractor, it’s a suggestion. But to the engineer, it is a . It says: I have considered the wind from the east, the earthquake every 2,500 years, the dancing load on the mezzanine. I have made my assumptions explicit. I have signed my name.
“Beam B-107: Deflection exceeds L/360 under live load.” tekla structural designer
And then, you click "Analyze."
In the end, you close the program. The model disappears into a file. But somewhere, a contractor will pour concrete into formwork, following your rebar schedule. A family will walk across your slab. And for sixty years, if you and TSD did your job, no one will ever think about the skeleton at all. To a client, this is gibberish
TSD performs the (FEA), that black magic of breaking a continuous slab into a million tiny squares, solving for stress at each intersection, and stitching the answers back into a whole. It reveals the hidden topology of force: how a load on the 10th floor travels down through eccentric cores, around openings, and finally whispers into the foundation. It says: I have considered the wind from
Open TSD, and you are not designing a building. You are designing a skeleton. The software strips away the drywall, the finishes, the lighting, and the soul of the interior, leaving only the bones. You draw a grid—a Cartesian prison of Xs and Ys. You assign a column here, a beam there. You tell it that this slab will hold 500 people dancing, or 10,000 books, or two feet of snow.