SteelPE
Structural
- Mar 9, 2006
- 2,743
Recently I was awarded two small projects from two end users. The projects consisted of the design of some metal building foundations. In each instance the columns rested on a knee wall that was approx. 3’-0” high with a required frost depth of 4’-0”. In each instance I have approximately 15.0 kips placed at the top of the wall. I designed the foundations and sent them off to the client only to get irate phone calls back about the size of the foundations I selected. The issues at play could have easily been mitigated by making minor modifications to the building during the design but this is not what I was hired to do. I see foundation designs with similar loads (15 kips applied 8’ above the footing) and 4x4 footings being used. I know there is no possible way an engineer can justify their design.
I am beginning to realize that doing work on this end of my industry just isn’t worth the hassle (end user metal building foundation design). The clients can’t really grasp the idea of the forces at play and never really appreciate the difficulty of the problems that were solved.
I am beginning to realize that doing work on this end of my industry just isn’t worth the hassle (end user metal building foundation design). The clients can’t really grasp the idea of the forces at play and never really appreciate the difficulty of the problems that were solved.