aseeng
Structural
- Jun 17, 2013
- 22
thread255-243275
The thread referenced was interesting and I'm curious of others more recent opinions. For my case consider a residential stem wall extending down to frost depth. Slab on grade on the interior, soil 6" below on the exterior. Frost depth 4'-6", 24" footing, 8" wall. We all know this works - right? Now run the numbers with Ko = 55 pcf. Overturning does not work without considering some passive resistance.
Now consider the same wall has to extend down an additional 4 ft to get to good bearing soils. 8'-6" of soil on the high side - 8'-0" of soil on the low side. If we ignore passive then we have a big retaining wall situation. I have a hard time envisioning the overturning problem here. I'm inclined to keep the design as is because I think the passive side will hold the wall up and it will not overturn. Maybe the failure is a small amount or rotation that affects finishes on the stud wall above?
Thanks for any opinions.
The thread referenced was interesting and I'm curious of others more recent opinions. For my case consider a residential stem wall extending down to frost depth. Slab on grade on the interior, soil 6" below on the exterior. Frost depth 4'-6", 24" footing, 8" wall. We all know this works - right? Now run the numbers with Ko = 55 pcf. Overturning does not work without considering some passive resistance.
Now consider the same wall has to extend down an additional 4 ft to get to good bearing soils. 8'-6" of soil on the high side - 8'-0" of soil on the low side. If we ignore passive then we have a big retaining wall situation. I have a hard time envisioning the overturning problem here. I'm inclined to keep the design as is because I think the passive side will hold the wall up and it will not overturn. Maybe the failure is a small amount or rotation that affects finishes on the stud wall above?
Thanks for any opinions.