maxwolf
Structural
- Jan 5, 2006
- 44
There's an existing, unreinforced masonry building, 4 stories, that was built ca. 1900. The perimeter masonry walls are load bearing, the interior is framed in steel with heavy cinder fill on terra cotta arched floors (155 lb/sf DL).
One of the exterior walls (5 wythe at 1st floor, 3 wythe at 4th) needs serious repointing (type O mortar, 350 psi, rated 'fair'). One proposal is to remove the exterior wythe of brick on this entire wall, parge and repair the backup remaining wythes, waterproof the wall, and then reinstall a wythe of veneer that is structurally disengaged (just cladding). Basically the wall looses a wythe of structural capacity. The wall on the other end of the building that this wall works in tandem with for lateral forces is left untouched.
The altered wall looks like it will pass dead and wind load combinations with the outer wythe removed per latest code, but seismic isn't even close to working. It never worked seismically according to modern code. I feel for grandfathered in buildings that one should never make them worse by altering them, even for load combinations that they were never meant to address when designed. Especially when you're talking removing 33% of shear capacity at the top of the wall, and about 20% at the bottom. Not to mention increasing the eccentricity between center of seismic force and center of resistance.
The counter argument is that the local code allows a designer to use 'old' code on old buildings, so removing a wythe of brick from a wall is 'ok' if the wall still works under the old code, which only considers wind.
Comments/corrections appreciated.
One of the exterior walls (5 wythe at 1st floor, 3 wythe at 4th) needs serious repointing (type O mortar, 350 psi, rated 'fair'). One proposal is to remove the exterior wythe of brick on this entire wall, parge and repair the backup remaining wythes, waterproof the wall, and then reinstall a wythe of veneer that is structurally disengaged (just cladding). Basically the wall looses a wythe of structural capacity. The wall on the other end of the building that this wall works in tandem with for lateral forces is left untouched.
The altered wall looks like it will pass dead and wind load combinations with the outer wythe removed per latest code, but seismic isn't even close to working. It never worked seismically according to modern code. I feel for grandfathered in buildings that one should never make them worse by altering them, even for load combinations that they were never meant to address when designed. Especially when you're talking removing 33% of shear capacity at the top of the wall, and about 20% at the bottom. Not to mention increasing the eccentricity between center of seismic force and center of resistance.
The counter argument is that the local code allows a designer to use 'old' code on old buildings, so removing a wythe of brick from a wall is 'ok' if the wall still works under the old code, which only considers wind.
Comments/corrections appreciated.