.Sorry for being a bit slow here, but how do do the trusses provide lateral support to the core from the peripheral columns with a joint like that?
Or is it the actual floor frame we were talking of earlier that provide that? Or am I way off base on what's being dicussed?
Nope. Not off base at all. It's a good question.
By itself, any one of these joints would have been pretty damn useless. But you add up 120 of them around the periphery (1 every other peripheral column), THEN you start getting some holding power.
Remember also that the cross trusses were locked into the concrete when it was poured, so these were pretty rigid.
Finally, the core columns were also laterally braced on the other 3 sides of each column (in addition to the 4th side that had the floor truss on it). All of this cross bracing (and the weight of the floor & contents) meant that the floor & bracket were going to stay pretty much where they were, absent some catastrophic event.
BTW, The slots were for assembly tolerances. Not to allow sliding, of course.
Tom