SQUIDALE
Structural
- Aug 14, 2004
- 4
Hello-
I am designing a cmu elevator rower to be added to the exterior of an existing masonry building as a "bump-out". The elevator shaft is basically a hollow masonry tube, extending three floors up. Wind, seismic and elevator rail loads parallel to the existing wall that I am bumping out on will tend to rack the shaft walls, in plan. Trying to use the exterior walls of the new shaft as shear walls for their full 3-story height to resist these lateral loads doesn't seem feasible because of the very high aspect ratio (height/length). Have thought instead to resolve lateral loads at each floor level into a couple that is to be resisted by connection to the existing floor diaphragms.
Have seen many other buildings with exterior elev shafts but this is my first time doing this. Has this approach been done before?
I am designing a cmu elevator rower to be added to the exterior of an existing masonry building as a "bump-out". The elevator shaft is basically a hollow masonry tube, extending three floors up. Wind, seismic and elevator rail loads parallel to the existing wall that I am bumping out on will tend to rack the shaft walls, in plan. Trying to use the exterior walls of the new shaft as shear walls for their full 3-story height to resist these lateral loads doesn't seem feasible because of the very high aspect ratio (height/length). Have thought instead to resolve lateral loads at each floor level into a couple that is to be resisted by connection to the existing floor diaphragms.
Have seen many other buildings with exterior elev shafts but this is my first time doing this. Has this approach been done before?