Jray2900:
In a column that large, have you taken full advantage of any LL reductions from above, prior to adding the new loads and checking the column cap’y? Joints on columns that size are usually primarily bearing joints and the two column ends should have been milled or saw cut square and true for bearing. How do you know what bending or lateral loads are on the col. at your critical location? Those are taken by the joint. And, if you have col. cap’y. problems, are you sure they don’t continue through any col. joints? How you would reinforce that col. would be a real dog around those W36 beams, but I can’t see it from here, and don’t know where the new loads are applied. Does the base pl. check for the new loads and what about conc. bearing stresses? If the base pl. checks out o.k. with the added load, then the 10' mat on piles is probably o.k. for a 458k added load. But, you should still do some min. calcs. there too, just to rationalize this redistribution of new loads, in your own mind. Those heavy sections do require some preheating because they are such large heat sinks in terms of cooling the welds too quickly. The req’rd. preheat temps should not be so high as to cause shortening (or softening) problems during the welding process, but I’d still do some shoring around the col., under the W36's, during the welding. Remember, your reinf’g. pls. only pick up new loads, in proportion to their area vs. the existing W14, unless you partially unload the existing col. prior to applying the new reinf’g. pls. With or without this partial unloading of the existing col. you will add some load to its already over stressed condition before the new reinf’g. pls. even start to pickup their share of the new loads. Also, the welds at each end of the reinf’g. pls. must be quite large to start to transfer loads into it, in a fairly short distance. The mid-height welds really only act to stitch/stabilize the new pls. to the W14. Remember, you only have about 12" btwn. the insides of the flgs. in which to weld (access for welding) and get added web pls. in place. You might be better off to use pls. from flg. tip to flg. tip, say about 14-16" wide by some thickness. This leads to simpler welding, and a much more stable col. cross section.