txa129
Structural
- Mar 26, 2024
- 2
I have a question about the necessity/function of continuous footings on metal buildings. I have seen this detailed a number of different ways. The way I see it most commonly done is a +/- 2ft wide * +/- 1ft thick continuous footing at the same elevation as the column footings with vertical dowels in to a "turndown" which is poured monolithically with the SOG (Type 1). I have also seen many applications where it was only the turndown to frost depth with no separate footing below (Type 2). In a typical PEMB, the gravity and lateral loads carry to the frames/columns and do not apply a linear load at the foundation level. The question is essentially, in Type 1 what does the bottom continuous footing actually do? In a design where the designer is using the slab to resist lateral loads via haripins and the column footings are designed for vertical loads only, depending on the frame reactions, the slab alone is often sufficient to transfer the loads in the frame direction without the need for actual tie beams between frame columns (let's not get into SOG vs structural slab for lateral loads). So, in the longitudinal (braced frame/portal frame) direction, are we saying the slab is not sufficient regardless of reaction level, and the continuous footing supposed to help stabilize the column footing? If that is the case, why would these footings need to cover the entire perimeter including the endwalls and not be isolated to braced frames. Certainly, in a design using moment resisting foundations, the need for the separate footing under the turndown goes away. But if this turndown is essentially a 12x18 GB that is adequately reinforced and is poured/tied continuous with the slab and "pedestal" portion of the column footing - does it not provide some longitudinal capacity itself? Perhaps it is a case of a detail that works when there is masonry, concrete, or tilt walls which impart a gravity load to the slab, and not just metal panel and so it becomes the "standard" detail that gets used for everything. Maybe the broader question is - what is the accepted way of resolving longitudinal column reactions to ground in a foundation design that uses the slab to resist all lateral loads.