cuels
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 15, 2008
- 51
I should probably have encountered this before, but unfortunately I haven't, or maybe I haven't thought hard enough about it. I am designing a 3-story wood framed hotel with a basement, which is going to have interior shear walls. In my mind, I should carry the shear from all stories down to the basement slab and into a footing, transferring the shear through anchor bolts into the footing. However, I don't know that this is common to shear an interior basement wall. I have heard that these can be transferred to the floor diaphragm and then magically it transfers into the soil providing passive resistance. This doesn't make sense when I have a 12 kip shear load transferring into the floor diaphragm and down to an anchor bolt and into the soil??? Is it common to sheet basement walls, in a building such as this, to transfer shear to the footing, and in that case, even a crawl space knee wall? Or, is there another system that is being developed through the foundation wall and floor diaphragm that transfers the shear to the soil around the perimeter of the 1st floor diaphragm?