structineer
Structural
- Jan 2, 2012
- 40
I believe that I have read through all the previous posts regarding basement walls and I still have some questions. I am working on a 10,000 sq-ft residential home with a daylight basement. The total dimensions are roughly 85'x35'. The 85' sides have jogs in them. The 35' is a straight run with the other wall being the walk-out side. We do have retaining walls that are perpendicular to the basement walls at both side walls at the walk-out basement side. I am attempting to analyze this as a rectangular tank because the final construction will not allow transfer of force to floor structure and they want to backfill early. I have gone through the PCA rectangular tank design method and I have also created a finite element analysis using STAAD. My question is has anyone analyzed a wall like this taking into account that the bottom is not a mat slab, but a strip footing? The builders are used to seeing 24" strip footings. So, my thoughts on analysis is to release the moments at the base because the strip footing cannot take this load. Without a slab extending to the opposite side wall, my strip footing will experience some localized higher bearing pressures I believe and will be somewhat subject to sliding. I will only have the passive resistance of the soil because they will surely backfill before pouring the slab on grade. I know that in order for the wall to slide, the entire wall has to go, so with the jogs and the ability of the wall to span horizontally, sliding becomes less of a factor in my opinion.
I have considered counterforts, but after running the analysis in STAAD, the counterforts help stiffen somewhat, but the force is so high on this wall that the counterforts move with the wall based on the displacement output. That makes sense to me because counterforts are really most helpful for the wall design, not the footing. This tells me that the PCA tables aren't 100% applicable because the counterforts do not provide the equivalent resistance as a true side wall.
I am heading in the direction of designing the wall somewhere between a fixed base and a pinned base with a larger strip footing. I ran the wall as a true cantilevered condition and my footing would need to be 7.5' in width for stability. My thoughts are that I look into the PCA charts and compare the factors for moment at the base of the wall with my forces and reduce the moment in the base of the wall, effectively reducing the required size of the footing. In order to do this, I would need to select a b/a ratio that makes sense. My wall is 12' tall from top of footing. I was planning on providing counterforts at 8' o.c. This would give me a b/a of 0.67, however as stated earlier, I would need to select a more practical b/a ratio. I'm thinking of going conservative to b/a = 2 and seeing what my moments are at the base.
Any experience or thoughts on this subject are greatly appreciated!
I have considered counterforts, but after running the analysis in STAAD, the counterforts help stiffen somewhat, but the force is so high on this wall that the counterforts move with the wall based on the displacement output. That makes sense to me because counterforts are really most helpful for the wall design, not the footing. This tells me that the PCA tables aren't 100% applicable because the counterforts do not provide the equivalent resistance as a true side wall.
I am heading in the direction of designing the wall somewhere between a fixed base and a pinned base with a larger strip footing. I ran the wall as a true cantilevered condition and my footing would need to be 7.5' in width for stability. My thoughts are that I look into the PCA charts and compare the factors for moment at the base of the wall with my forces and reduce the moment in the base of the wall, effectively reducing the required size of the footing. In order to do this, I would need to select a b/a ratio that makes sense. My wall is 12' tall from top of footing. I was planning on providing counterforts at 8' o.c. This would give me a b/a of 0.67, however as stated earlier, I would need to select a more practical b/a ratio. I'm thinking of going conservative to b/a = 2 and seeing what my moments are at the base.
Any experience or thoughts on this subject are greatly appreciated!