bylar
Structural
- Jan 3, 2002
- 173
Basement walls of 20’ in height
Residential
IBC 2006 North Carolina
Paragraph 1610.1 “Basement walls and other wall in which horizontal movement is restricted at the top shall be designed for at rest pressure”
Exception basement nor more than 8’ below grade with flexible floor
Similar wording in previous code
Table 1601.1 for most sandy types of backfill has an at rest pressure of 60 psf
For reinforced masonry with 12” CMU that puts a limit at about 12’ with 11’ of backfill.
If you go to concrete then the wall is possible but the resultant at the top is app 2100#/ft.
With a typical ¾” plywood floor as a diaphragm the plywood is overloaded.
Any ideas on how you have solved such a situation
Residential
IBC 2006 North Carolina
Paragraph 1610.1 “Basement walls and other wall in which horizontal movement is restricted at the top shall be designed for at rest pressure”
Exception basement nor more than 8’ below grade with flexible floor
Similar wording in previous code
Table 1601.1 for most sandy types of backfill has an at rest pressure of 60 psf
For reinforced masonry with 12” CMU that puts a limit at about 12’ with 11’ of backfill.
If you go to concrete then the wall is possible but the resultant at the top is app 2100#/ft.
With a typical ¾” plywood floor as a diaphragm the plywood is overloaded.
Any ideas on how you have solved such a situation