mcr07
Structural
- Aug 20, 2012
- 25
I have a quick question to see what the structural community opinion is with regards to this:
This concrete pole is being installed on a Seismic Design Category D
We've designed this concrete pole based on the guidelines of the CBC 10, section 1807 for Embedded poles. A light pole is being attached to this pole.
We figured the depth, based on the equations on section 1807.3.2.
Based on the loads, the depth we found was only 4'-0". A square area of 48"x48" was assumed.
The question now is the minimum longitudinal reinforcement for this concrete pole.
I've discussed this with other engineers, and to my understanding, section 1810.3.9.4.2 shall apply based on the Seismic Design Category and the fact that Seismic Loads govern the design.
The minimum longitudinal reinforcement called out for this section is 0.005 of the Ag.
Any feedback for this? Reason I'm asking is because based on the sq area, the still is about 12" sq in.
Any exceptions that could apply to this?
Are there any other provisions for foundations of this type? It seems pretty straight forward, but the question arose because we've noticed other companies issuing less steel for an application like this.
Thanks!
This concrete pole is being installed on a Seismic Design Category D
We've designed this concrete pole based on the guidelines of the CBC 10, section 1807 for Embedded poles. A light pole is being attached to this pole.
We figured the depth, based on the equations on section 1807.3.2.
Based on the loads, the depth we found was only 4'-0". A square area of 48"x48" was assumed.
The question now is the minimum longitudinal reinforcement for this concrete pole.
I've discussed this with other engineers, and to my understanding, section 1810.3.9.4.2 shall apply based on the Seismic Design Category and the fact that Seismic Loads govern the design.
The minimum longitudinal reinforcement called out for this section is 0.005 of the Ag.
Any feedback for this? Reason I'm asking is because based on the sq area, the still is about 12" sq in.
Any exceptions that could apply to this?
Are there any other provisions for foundations of this type? It seems pretty straight forward, but the question arose because we've noticed other companies issuing less steel for an application like this.
Thanks!