Ricyteach
Geotechnical
- Sep 28, 2011
- 27
SUMMARY: What I am imagining is- instead of a bearing wall just sitting on joists which then sit on another bearing wall below- perhaps there a style of construction where a wall sits on top of joists, and those joists then sit on top of a beam that supports the weight of that wall plus the joist loads, and transfers those loads over to the exterior walls and down to the foundation. Does such a thing exist? If so, is there a way to determine this without cracking open floors and walls?
DETAILS:
I'm looking at sizing some footings and the W beam for a typical 3-storey row house in Brooklyn, NYC. 30 ft deep x 20 wide floor plan.
The basement lumber beam is being replaced with a W beam. The existing beam is 3.875"x6.5" and has a 8 ft span between two freestanding masonry columns. It continues past that span with another shorter span and goes into a beam pocket in the rubble wall on one side, and on the other it has another shorter span and then rests on an existing CMU wall (parallel to that CMU wall) and then goes into the beam pocket in the rubble wall (at the location the CMU wall meets the rubble wall).
The goal is to remove the masonry columns, and replace most of the lumber beam with a 16 ft span W beam supported at each end. The portion of lumber beam on the masonry wall will remain (the masonry wall will be filled with grout and we're going to check if there's a foundation under it; will also check that existing CMU wall based on TMS 402 to make sure it's ok to support that partial leftover beam).
Reconnaissance claims there are 3 bearing walls stacked on top of this beam, with all 3 floors transferring their loads to this beam.
I'm trying to figure out if this passes the smell test. Could this 8 ft beam be supporting all that load...? If I assume 50 psf floor loads (tributary width for the beam is reported to be only 7.7 ft; not sure why- chasing that one down) and 20 psf for 10 ft tall two-sided plaster walls, and another 10 psf dead load for the attic, the beam load is 1900 lbs per foot.
Assuming the (very old) lumber beam has an E between 1,000 ksi to 2,000 ksi, in the middle of this 8 ft span (bearing in mind the beam continues past this span) it should be seeing a deflection of something like 1/2" to 1" under full DL+LL, and about 1/4" to 1/2" for dead load only. But it doesn't have anywhere near this amount of deflection. The deflection appears to be so little it's not distinguishable.
Because of this I am wondering if this existing basement beam really is carrying the loads from the upper floors. I am imagining it could be only carrying the 1st floor load + 1st floor wall. So I imagined a way this could be true by inventing the idea of a beam carrying the weight of a wall and floor at each storey, and transferring that load to the outer walls and down to the foundation. Could this be the case? For each floor to be sort of "self supporting" in this way?
DETAILS:
I'm looking at sizing some footings and the W beam for a typical 3-storey row house in Brooklyn, NYC. 30 ft deep x 20 wide floor plan.
The basement lumber beam is being replaced with a W beam. The existing beam is 3.875"x6.5" and has a 8 ft span between two freestanding masonry columns. It continues past that span with another shorter span and goes into a beam pocket in the rubble wall on one side, and on the other it has another shorter span and then rests on an existing CMU wall (parallel to that CMU wall) and then goes into the beam pocket in the rubble wall (at the location the CMU wall meets the rubble wall).
The goal is to remove the masonry columns, and replace most of the lumber beam with a 16 ft span W beam supported at each end. The portion of lumber beam on the masonry wall will remain (the masonry wall will be filled with grout and we're going to check if there's a foundation under it; will also check that existing CMU wall based on TMS 402 to make sure it's ok to support that partial leftover beam).
Reconnaissance claims there are 3 bearing walls stacked on top of this beam, with all 3 floors transferring their loads to this beam.
I'm trying to figure out if this passes the smell test. Could this 8 ft beam be supporting all that load...? If I assume 50 psf floor loads (tributary width for the beam is reported to be only 7.7 ft; not sure why- chasing that one down) and 20 psf for 10 ft tall two-sided plaster walls, and another 10 psf dead load for the attic, the beam load is 1900 lbs per foot.
Assuming the (very old) lumber beam has an E between 1,000 ksi to 2,000 ksi, in the middle of this 8 ft span (bearing in mind the beam continues past this span) it should be seeing a deflection of something like 1/2" to 1" under full DL+LL, and about 1/4" to 1/2" for dead load only. But it doesn't have anywhere near this amount of deflection. The deflection appears to be so little it's not distinguishable.
Because of this I am wondering if this existing basement beam really is carrying the loads from the upper floors. I am imagining it could be only carrying the 1st floor load + 1st floor wall. So I imagined a way this could be true by inventing the idea of a beam carrying the weight of a wall and floor at each storey, and transferring that load to the outer walls and down to the foundation. Could this be the case? For each floor to be sort of "self supporting" in this way?