BDE Engineering
Structural
- Oct 16, 2024
- 2
I ran into a odd situation in a roller skating rink this week. The structure is 216x100 feet with the walls constructed of CMU. The long faces are the N and S faces of the building. The SE corner of the building has approx 4" of slab settlement (the area of settlement is approx 20 feet ea way from the corner). That same corner has approx 2" of settlement of the CMU walls, which had piers installed several years ago and show no signs of further settlement. Measurements taken with a laser level that does a 360 degree laser in the vertical plane show the wall has not moved horizontally. Also the slab is about 1-2" low along the eastern 3/4 of the building along the south wall and its only settled in the 15 feet perpendicular to the wall ( the exception is, of course, the SE corner where it's settling approx 4"). For context the owner has arcade games such as skiball machines that he says are quite heavy ( I doubt they are heavy enough to cause any issue, but I mention it for context).
Now I have all that laid out, the main problem that I'm struggling with is the interior slab at the SE corner has pulled away from the CMU wall leaving about a 3 inch gap. Interior slabs moving up and down a small amount from moisture variables in the soil are not uncommon with the clay soil here in the Kansas City area; however, this is something I've never seen in almost 20 years of doing this. A interior slab is at a pretty constant temprature, so shrinkage can't be a factor. This structure was built 60 years ago, and this is a recent problem according to the owner who's owned it for 20 years.
The only thing I can think of is that when the slab is sinking its causing itself to pull away from the wall, although it doesn't seem rational to me to say that. I'm thinking that if 3/4 of that slab is settling per my first paragraph perhaps maybe that's causing the pull away from the wall?
What in the world is going on with this slab? I cannot think of a explanation I can truly rationalize.
Thanks.
Brian Hansen, PE
Now I have all that laid out, the main problem that I'm struggling with is the interior slab at the SE corner has pulled away from the CMU wall leaving about a 3 inch gap. Interior slabs moving up and down a small amount from moisture variables in the soil are not uncommon with the clay soil here in the Kansas City area; however, this is something I've never seen in almost 20 years of doing this. A interior slab is at a pretty constant temprature, so shrinkage can't be a factor. This structure was built 60 years ago, and this is a recent problem according to the owner who's owned it for 20 years.
The only thing I can think of is that when the slab is sinking its causing itself to pull away from the wall, although it doesn't seem rational to me to say that. I'm thinking that if 3/4 of that slab is settling per my first paragraph perhaps maybe that's causing the pull away from the wall?
What in the world is going on with this slab? I cannot think of a explanation I can truly rationalize.
Thanks.
Brian Hansen, PE