MidwestSE
Structural
- May 30, 2014
- 49
Hey Everybody!
Here is a question we discuss internally frequently and I'm curious what everybody else does.
Situation: We have a composite steel podium with several stories of wood on top (+/- 50' tall building). We have a CMU elevator shaft that we're not using as a lateral system. On the majority of our jobs, we do not have any steel beams supported from the CMU (for construction scheduling purposes) and do not connect the wood to the CMU. Long story short, the CMU shaft is along for the ride.
Question 1:
Does anybody else routinely do it this way where the CMU shaft is along for the ride and not participating as a lateral element? Any comments on why/why not are welcome.
Question 2:
Would you tie the concrete slab into the CMU shaft?
Question 3:
If you wouldn't tie the slab into the shaft, would you detail a movement gap around the shaft at the slab or pour the slab up to the CMU and force the cmu to go along with any movements?
All thoughts/perspectives welcome!
Here is a question we discuss internally frequently and I'm curious what everybody else does.
Situation: We have a composite steel podium with several stories of wood on top (+/- 50' tall building). We have a CMU elevator shaft that we're not using as a lateral system. On the majority of our jobs, we do not have any steel beams supported from the CMU (for construction scheduling purposes) and do not connect the wood to the CMU. Long story short, the CMU shaft is along for the ride.
Question 1:
Does anybody else routinely do it this way where the CMU shaft is along for the ride and not participating as a lateral element? Any comments on why/why not are welcome.
Question 2:
Would you tie the concrete slab into the CMU shaft?
Question 3:
If you wouldn't tie the slab into the shaft, would you detail a movement gap around the shaft at the slab or pour the slab up to the CMU and force the cmu to go along with any movements?
All thoughts/perspectives welcome!