Snow Load Reference · AK
Alaska Snow Loads
Typical ground snow load in Alaska: 40–120 PSF for planning. Actual design values are set by your local jurisdiction and confirmed by a licensed engineer.
Planning and educational reference only. Verify final design snow loads with your building manufacturer, engineer of record, and local building department.
Typical Ground Snow Load
40–120 PSF
Regional considerations
Snow loads vary enormously by borough. Interior and coastal Alaska routinely require 60–120 PSF or more; case-study zones exceed 300 PSF. Always verify with the local jurisdiction.
Mountain / high-elevation zones in Alaska can require design snow loads up to 300 PSF — verify with the local jurisdiction before final design.
Designing a steel building in Alaska
- Roof framing: purlin spacing and rafter depth sized to the jurisdictional design snow load, not a rule of thumb.
- Drift & unbalanced loads: checked against parapets, adjacent rooflines, and rooftop equipment.
- Snow slide: smooth steel panels shed snow — slide loads onto porches, lean-tos, and adjacent buildings are part of the design.
- Foundations: snow-driven column reactions size piers, anchor bolts, and slab reinforcement.
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