bricep
Structural
- Apr 27, 2018
- 3
Hi all, this is my first post here! I couldn't find a topic specifically pertaining to this, so I decided to make a new thread for it. Basically, I am wondering how those of you who do a lot of wood shearwall design handle overturning forces, primarily when it comes to tension. When I have a single story structure, or even a two story structure, I just use segmented shearwall design. If there happens to be a tension force I need to design for, each shearwall end post gets its own holddown at the foundation level. This means that if a tension force from a shearwall above does not land directly over the shearwall end post below, then both shearwall end posts receive their respective holddowns at the foundation level (rather than relying on the strap above to transfer the tension load out to the end posts of the shearwall below).
Once a third story comes into play, however, and especially when the wall segments have end posts that do not align with the segment end posts below, I have a huge smattering of holddowns all over my foundation stem wall! At this point, do you guys and gals switch to a perforated shearwall design to keep the tension strapping to the ends of the entire wall elevation? Or do you stick with segmented design and determine that the shearwall panel below transfers the tensile overturning above out to the end posts of the wall segment below?
I'd love to hear your thoughts on this, there is a HUGE amount of book keeping that needs to happen once that third story comes into play, and I would really like to simplify my approach as much as possible. BTW I do primarily residential design here in Seattle.
-Brice
Once a third story comes into play, however, and especially when the wall segments have end posts that do not align with the segment end posts below, I have a huge smattering of holddowns all over my foundation stem wall! At this point, do you guys and gals switch to a perforated shearwall design to keep the tension strapping to the ends of the entire wall elevation? Or do you stick with segmented design and determine that the shearwall panel below transfers the tensile overturning above out to the end posts of the wall segment below?
I'd love to hear your thoughts on this, there is a HUGE amount of book keeping that needs to happen once that third story comes into play, and I would really like to simplify my approach as much as possible. BTW I do primarily residential design here in Seattle.
-Brice