Exposure D

Flat unobstructed areas and water surfaces with maximum wind exposure

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How to Choose

Transition Zones
Where Exposures Change

Exposure B
Suburban/Urban

Exposure C
Open Terrain

Exposure D
Coastal/Ocean

Understanding Exposure D Terrain

Exposure D represents flat, unobstructed coastal areas and smooth surfaces directly exposed to wind flowing over open water. Defined in ASCE 7-22 (and ASCE 7-16) Section 26.7.4, it produces the highest design wind pressures of all exposure categories.

Exposure D applies to sites within 600 feet of the shoreline or within a distance of 60 times the building height from the shoreline, whichever is greater, for sites with wind flowing over open water.

Coastal/Ocean

Flat, unobstructed areas exposed to wind flowing over open water (ocean, bays, sounds).

Distance Requirements

Within 600 ft of shoreline OR within 60× building height from water, whichever is greater.

Highest Pressures

17-21% higher wind pressures than Exposure C due to smooth water surface.

ASCE 7-22 / 7-16

Defined in Section 26.7.4 of both ASCE 7-22 (latest) and ASCE 7-16.

What is Exposure D?

Exposure D represents flat, unobstructed areas exposed to wind flowing over open water or smooth mud flats for a distance of at least 5,000 ft or 20 times the building height, whichever is greater.

ASCE 7 Definition (Section 26.7.4)

Exposure D: Flat, unobstructed areas and water surfaces. This exposure applies to sites with surface roughness D as defined in Section 26.7 prevailing in the upwind direction for a distance greater than or equal to 5,000 ft (1,524 m) or 20 times the building height, whichever is greater.

Critical Distance Requirements:

  • Exposure D extends inland from shoreline: 600 ft OR 60× building height, whichever is greater
  • Exposure D extends over water: 5,000 ft OR 20× building height, whichever is greater
  • Applies when wind flows over open water (ocean, bays, sounds, large lakes)
  • Surface must be smooth - water, mud flats, ice, or smooth ground

Exposure D produces the highest wind pressures because water surfaces provide minimal resistance to wind flow, allowing higher wind speeds to reach structures near the shoreline.

Exposure D Distance Requirements

Understanding when Exposure D applies requires careful measurement from the shoreline. ASCE 7 provides two distance criteria that vary based on whether you're measuring inland or over water.

ASCE 7 Exposure D Distance Requirements

Inland from Shoreline (Site on Land):

Exposure D extends inland a distance of:
600 feet OR 60 × building height, whichever is GREATER

Over Water (from shoreline to site):

Exposure D requires open water for:
5,000 feet OR 20 × building height, whichever is GREATER

Distance Calculation Examples

Building Height 60× Height (Inland) 600 ft Minimum Exposure D Distance Inland
15 ft (residential) 900 ft 600 ft 900 ft (60× governs)
25 ft (small commercial) 1,500 ft 600 ft 1,500 ft (60× governs)
8 ft (low storage) 480 ft 600 ft 600 ft (minimum governs)
40 ft (hotel) 2,400 ft 600 ft 2,400 ft (60× governs)

Key Point: For most buildings over 10 ft tall, the 60× building height criterion controls the inland Exposure D distance, not the 600 ft minimum!

Typical Exposure D Locations

Beachfront

Oceanfront homes, beach condos, hotels directly on Atlantic/Pacific/Gulf coasts within Exposure D zone.

Marina/Docks

Waterfront structures, piers, docks, marinas on coastal bays, sounds, or large harbors with open water exposure.

Coastal Industrial

Ports, shipyards, coastal warehouses, offshore support facilities within 600 ft (or 60× height) of open water.

Large Lake Shore

Great Lakes shoreline structures, large reservoir shores where wind flows over ≥5,000 ft of open water.

Coastal Highways

Bridge structures, elevated roadways along immediate coastline with unobstructed wind flow from ocean.

Island Structures

Barrier island buildings, offshore platform structures completely surrounded by water.

Wind Loads with Exposure D

Exposure D uses the highest velocity pressure exposure coefficient (Kh) values, resulting in maximum design wind pressures.

Velocity Pressure Exposure Coefficients (Kh and Kz)

Height (ft) Exposure B Kz Exposure C Kz Exposure D Kz D vs C D vs B
0-15 0.57 0.85 1.03 +21% +81%
20 0.62 0.90 1.08 +20% +74%
25 0.66 0.94 1.12 +19% +70%
30 0.70 0.98 1.16 +18% +66%
40 0.76 1.04 1.22 +17% +61%
60 0.86 1.13 1.31 +16% +52%

Massive Impact: At 15 ft height, Exposure D produces 21% higher wind pressures than Exposure C, and 81% higher than Exposure B! Coastal structures face significantly higher wind loads.

Example: Beachfront Hotel Window - Outer Banks, NC

Structure

Oceanfront hotel
200 ft from Atlantic Ocean
Mean roof height: 40 ft
Risk Category III

Wind Parameters

V = 150 mph (ASCE 7-22)
Exposure D (coastal)
Kzt = 1.0, Kd = 0.85

Component

Window - Zone 5
Effective area = 12 ft²
GCp = -1.00
Enclosed: GCpi = ±0.18

Result

p = -68.9 psf
Required: DP-70
(vs DP-60 for Exposure C)

Calculation Steps:

1. Kh for Exposure D, h=40 ft:

Kh = 1.22 (from ASCE 7 Table 26.10-1)

2. Velocity pressure qh:

qh = 0.00256 × 1.22 × 1.0 × 0.85 × 1.0 × 150²
qh = 58.4 psf

3. Wind pressure (governing case):

p = qh[(GCp) - (GCpi)]
p = 58.4[(-1.00) - (+0.18)] = -68.9 psf

4. Component selection (LRFD with 1.0W):

LRFD pressure = 1.0 × 68.9 = 68.9 psf
Select DP-70 (70 psf ≥ 68.9 psf ✓)

Comparison - Same building in Exposure C:

Kh = 1.04 → qh = 49.8 psf → p = -58.8 psf
Would only need DP-60 (vs DP-70 for Exposure D)

Common Exposure D Mistakes

Mistake #1: Not Checking the 60× Building Height Criterion

WRONG: "My building is 700 ft from the ocean, so Exposure C applies" (but building is 20 ft tall)

RIGHT: 60 × 20 ft = 1,200 ft. Exposure D extends 1,200 ft inland for this building. Use Exposure D!

Impact: 17-21% under-design of wind loads

Mistake #2: Using Exposure D for All Coastal Sites

WRONG: "It's near the coast, must be Exposure D"

RIGHT: If beyond the Exposure D distance (600 ft or 60× height from water) and terrain has obstructions, use Exposure C or B.

Impact: Over-design, wasted material costs

Mistake #3: Forgetting Open Water Distance Requirement

WRONG: Site is 100 ft from small pond → "Use Exposure D"

RIGHT: Exposure D requires ≥5,000 ft (or 20× height) of open water UPWIND. Small ponds don't create Exposure D.

Impact: Over-design for sites not truly exposed to long water fetch

Mistake #4: Applying Exposure D to Leeward Side

WRONG: Beachfront building → "Use Exposure D for all wind directions"

RIGHT: Exposure D only applies for wind directions flowing OVER the open water. Landward wind directions may be Exposure C or B.

Impact: Over-design for non-water wind directions (though often conservative default is to use D for all)

Exposure D Determination Checklist

Measure distance from site to nearest open water (ocean, bay, sound, large lake)

Calculate 60 × building height - compare to 600 ft minimum

If site is within greater of (600 ft or 60× height), check for Exposure D

Verify open water extends ≥5,000 ft (or 20× height) in upwind direction

Check each wind direction separately - may be D for ocean winds, C for land winds

Document with aerial imagery showing water distance and building height

When design is conservative, using Exposure D for all directions simplifies analysis

Exposure D Coastal Wind Loads Made Simple

WindLoadCalc.com automatically applies Exposure D coefficients for coastal structures

Calculate Exposure D Loads FREE

✓ ASCE 7-22 & 7-16 compliant   ✓ All exposure categories   ✓ Coastal DP ratings   ✓ Instant results

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