arik79
Structural
- Jan 12, 2020
- 11
Hi
I am modelling a mid rise building in ETABS and I am having some problems with modelling null areas/shells. The reason I am modelling these is to add additional loads in certain areas (balcony, corridor etc.) to a slab element that has already been modelled and has had its load assigned.
I feel ETABS is a little inconsistent when it comes to modelling null areas. For this model, the addition of one, randomly positioned, square, null area causes ETABS to give warnings about instability. Deleting that null area causes there to be no issues at all.
I have done the spot checks we usually do for our ETABS models and nothing seems to be out of the ordinary (modal mass participation, base shear, etc.), so I am unsure why these warnings are popping up with the addition of a null area.
I was hoping someone could provide some guidance about the correct way of modelling null areas in ETABS OR some guidance on how to add additional loads like balcony/corridor to a floor plate.
Thanks in advanced
I am modelling a mid rise building in ETABS and I am having some problems with modelling null areas/shells. The reason I am modelling these is to add additional loads in certain areas (balcony, corridor etc.) to a slab element that has already been modelled and has had its load assigned.
I feel ETABS is a little inconsistent when it comes to modelling null areas. For this model, the addition of one, randomly positioned, square, null area causes ETABS to give warnings about instability. Deleting that null area causes there to be no issues at all.
I have done the spot checks we usually do for our ETABS models and nothing seems to be out of the ordinary (modal mass participation, base shear, etc.), so I am unsure why these warnings are popping up with the addition of a null area.
I was hoping someone could provide some guidance about the correct way of modelling null areas in ETABS OR some guidance on how to add additional loads like balcony/corridor to a floor plate.
Thanks in advanced