JohnnySm
Structural
- Feb 2, 2017
- 19
Hi Guys,
I have a few questions regarding foundation design for a basement support structure.
Please, first review the attached to familiarise yourself with the geometry/scope of my questions.
The scheme, at this point is to create a basement retaining wall box structure with slab over and suspended slab (using the ground floor under as permanent form work) for the basement floor. All loading from the above slab and superstructure over is to be distributed into the perimeter and spine RC walls onto underlying ground beams supported by a collection of equally spaced piles. NOTE, we have chosen to technically model the basement slab as a suspended floor not as a raft foundation as there is no sporadic column arrangement ( it seems the more value engineered method as a piled raft slab will require substantial reinforcement/depth to redistribute the loading, we can discuss this also).
My main question regards how to go about modelling/designing the ground beam element. The usual way i would consider is to assume a simply supported continuous beam using the pile positions as supports. However this method does not incorporate any of the additional effects from varying stiffness due to the sub grade modulus from the pile.
Do i just assume rigid stiffness and increase the required rebar for a conservative estimate on the ground beam or do i need to do vigorous analysis and model the supports as springs? (FYI im still new and haven't actually done spring support analysis) blame my university. any matierial on this would be splendid.
FYI, i have done research on winkler foundation and elastic foundation design. It seems very complicated. is this really necessary?
Also the FEA model for the superstructure is done on Tekla Structural Designer. Not sure if there's a way of inputting the values for pile stiffness K value.
Sorry its a long one!
Cheers guys!
I have a few questions regarding foundation design for a basement support structure.
Please, first review the attached to familiarise yourself with the geometry/scope of my questions.
The scheme, at this point is to create a basement retaining wall box structure with slab over and suspended slab (using the ground floor under as permanent form work) for the basement floor. All loading from the above slab and superstructure over is to be distributed into the perimeter and spine RC walls onto underlying ground beams supported by a collection of equally spaced piles. NOTE, we have chosen to technically model the basement slab as a suspended floor not as a raft foundation as there is no sporadic column arrangement ( it seems the more value engineered method as a piled raft slab will require substantial reinforcement/depth to redistribute the loading, we can discuss this also).
My main question regards how to go about modelling/designing the ground beam element. The usual way i would consider is to assume a simply supported continuous beam using the pile positions as supports. However this method does not incorporate any of the additional effects from varying stiffness due to the sub grade modulus from the pile.
Do i just assume rigid stiffness and increase the required rebar for a conservative estimate on the ground beam or do i need to do vigorous analysis and model the supports as springs? (FYI im still new and haven't actually done spring support analysis) blame my university. any matierial on this would be splendid.
FYI, i have done research on winkler foundation and elastic foundation design. It seems very complicated. is this really necessary?
Also the FEA model for the superstructure is done on Tekla Structural Designer. Not sure if there's a way of inputting the values for pile stiffness K value.
Sorry its a long one!
Cheers guys!