mikeCTE
Structural
- Feb 21, 2014
- 42
thread507-405072
We've been asked to check the use of a side-mounted handrail that will attach to a turn-down edge of sidewalk (5ft wide sidewalk). Project requires the use of AASHTO which shows 200lb point load + 50 PLF line load applied + 50 PLF line load in the direction of gravity. We can get the structures to all pencil out, but if we look at this from a global perspective of overturning and sliding (safety factor of 2.0 and 1.5, respectively, it looks like we need to thicken up the sidewalk to 5" (from 4") to get it to work.
We are not accounting for the weight of the person/object applying the lateral loading, so it's conservative, but I am worried our client will be unhappy when we tell them to increase their quantity of concrete by 25% to handle a stability check that's almost impossible to happen in real life.
Any thoughts on a reasonable way to justify the presence of live load (which would assist the overturning and sliding resistance)?
We've been asked to check the use of a side-mounted handrail that will attach to a turn-down edge of sidewalk (5ft wide sidewalk). Project requires the use of AASHTO which shows 200lb point load + 50 PLF line load applied + 50 PLF line load in the direction of gravity. We can get the structures to all pencil out, but if we look at this from a global perspective of overturning and sliding (safety factor of 2.0 and 1.5, respectively, it looks like we need to thicken up the sidewalk to 5" (from 4") to get it to work.
We are not accounting for the weight of the person/object applying the lateral loading, so it's conservative, but I am worried our client will be unhappy when we tell them to increase their quantity of concrete by 25% to handle a stability check that's almost impossible to happen in real life.
Any thoughts on a reasonable way to justify the presence of live load (which would assist the overturning and sliding resistance)?