When looking at the ASCE 7 Two Stage Analysis Procedure, there seems to be an anomaly that bothers me and I'm wondering others opinions/experience. In terms of seismic forces, it seems to me that the two stage procedure can be quite beneficial for the upper level light-framing, but can be penalizing on the lower rigid structure (and foundations).
What bothers me is that I could look at it per 12.2.3.1 (ASCE 7-10) for Vertical Combinations and potentially get an overall lower base shear/overturning on the building, but a higher distribution of forces on the upper levels. Or, I could look at it per 12.2.3.2 as a two-stage and get lower distribution of forces on the upper, but larger overall base shear and overturning for the building.
What I would really want to do is design the lower portion per 12.2.3.1 and the upper per 12.2.3.2. It seems pretty clear that is not the intent of the language of the code, but the practical side of me says that if I took the penalty on the upper framing by just using 12.2.3.1, I have a code-complaint lower portion of the structure with lower design forces. But if I design the upper per 12.2.3.2, all of a sudden that same dsign for the lower portion is not code compliant? How does the lower portion know what design methodology I used or what forces the upper levels were designed for?
In my particular current case, I'm looking at a building that is 4 stories of wood framing over 3 stories of P.T. slabs and concrete shear walls, so perhaps this anomaly is more severe than a single level rigid lower portion.
Am I way off on this type of practical thinking? Even if I am not, perhaps I am just yelling at the clouds.
What bothers me is that I could look at it per 12.2.3.1 (ASCE 7-10) for Vertical Combinations and potentially get an overall lower base shear/overturning on the building, but a higher distribution of forces on the upper levels. Or, I could look at it per 12.2.3.2 as a two-stage and get lower distribution of forces on the upper, but larger overall base shear and overturning for the building.
What I would really want to do is design the lower portion per 12.2.3.1 and the upper per 12.2.3.2. It seems pretty clear that is not the intent of the language of the code, but the practical side of me says that if I took the penalty on the upper framing by just using 12.2.3.1, I have a code-complaint lower portion of the structure with lower design forces. But if I design the upper per 12.2.3.2, all of a sudden that same dsign for the lower portion is not code compliant? How does the lower portion know what design methodology I used or what forces the upper levels were designed for?
In my particular current case, I'm looking at a building that is 4 stories of wood framing over 3 stories of P.T. slabs and concrete shear walls, so perhaps this anomaly is more severe than a single level rigid lower portion.
Am I way off on this type of practical thinking? Even if I am not, perhaps I am just yelling at the clouds.