StrEng007
Structural
- Aug 22, 2014
- 542
I have a 6 foot wide pedestrian ramp that climbs up to a 7'-0" elevation (1:12 pitch). This is an exterior ramp that will be used as primary egress. The ramp walls are reinforced CMU and there will be a concrete slab at the top to create the walking surface (handrails and guards post-installed). Is it necessary to backfill the inside of the ramp walls if the walking surface can span the 6ft wide ramp as a structural slab? Or is it best practice to backfill the inside of the ramp walls and treat the slab as a slab on grade?
If backfilling is required can the slab act as a tension tie (I would provide adequate reinforcing and not allow slab joints parallel to the path of travel). This would allow me to keep the top of wall restrained (using the at rest pressure coefficient Kp). Or must the wall be designed as a pure cantilever during the backfill process, before the 'tie-slab' is placed? I'm not sure what means and methods are available for bracing the wall during backfill, if any.
If backfilling is required can the slab act as a tension tie (I would provide adequate reinforcing and not allow slab joints parallel to the path of travel). This would allow me to keep the top of wall restrained (using the at rest pressure coefficient Kp). Or must the wall be designed as a pure cantilever during the backfill process, before the 'tie-slab' is placed? I'm not sure what means and methods are available for bracing the wall during backfill, if any.