SouthFloridaPE
Structural
- Sep 18, 2009
- 3
Imagine a 1-story rectangular home with a garage at the front. This is reinf. masonry with wood trusses. The only lateral resisting elements along the front are the two 24" wide masonry piers at ea. side of the garage door. Now the lateral force coming from the diaphragm is about 8000 lbs at 9 ft height (Florida, 140 mph wind, exposure C). There's no doubt the garage door frame (16 ft wide) will have an uplift force on one column and compression on the other (on top of the moments and shears).
Gravity loads are small and counteracted by wind uplift from the roof.
Now here's the discussion: This house has a slab on grade with an 18"x16" monolithic footing around the perimeter. To make it worst, the footing only has 2#5 bottom bars, so it is incapable of receiving any moment from the frame (no top steel). How do they do it without adding a concrete pad to get enough weight for the concentrated overturning forces (0.6D+W)?
My client thinks I'm crazy and overdesigning. Am I?
Gravity loads are small and counteracted by wind uplift from the roof.
Now here's the discussion: This house has a slab on grade with an 18"x16" monolithic footing around the perimeter. To make it worst, the footing only has 2#5 bottom bars, so it is incapable of receiving any moment from the frame (no top steel). How do they do it without adding a concrete pad to get enough weight for the concentrated overturning forces (0.6D+W)?
My client thinks I'm crazy and overdesigning. Am I?