BadgerPE
Structural
- Jan 27, 2010
- 500
Background:
45' wall warehouse. 15' tall foundation wall (full soil fill) with 30' tilt-up panel on top. No bracing for either wall. Built on weathered dolomite (qa=5,000 psf) so rotation of a cantilever wall is likely minimal.
Question:
Are there any quick rules of thumb for establishing which is more economical to construct? This is for preliminary discussion purposes only. I feel like the base moment will be rather significant at the base of the wall due to the soil/wind loads. Leaning toward buttresses at this point, but could be persuaded otherwise. Given the proximity to another building and the likelihood of future buildings, I don't think soil nailing or any other form of tieback would be acceptable.
**Edit: I meant to say counterfort as this would be on the soil-retained side. Sorry for the incorrect terminology.**
45' wall warehouse. 15' tall foundation wall (full soil fill) with 30' tilt-up panel on top. No bracing for either wall. Built on weathered dolomite (qa=5,000 psf) so rotation of a cantilever wall is likely minimal.
Question:
Are there any quick rules of thumb for establishing which is more economical to construct? This is for preliminary discussion purposes only. I feel like the base moment will be rather significant at the base of the wall due to the soil/wind loads. Leaning toward buttresses at this point, but could be persuaded otherwise. Given the proximity to another building and the likelihood of future buildings, I don't think soil nailing or any other form of tieback would be acceptable.
**Edit: I meant to say counterfort as this would be on the soil-retained side. Sorry for the incorrect terminology.**