RRBegin
Structural
- Jul 31, 2001
- 38
I am detailing columns and footings for a pre-engineered metal building. This building will sit on a concrete foundation wall with a continuous footing. The plans show a detail at the column locations for a wall bump-out that is two inches bigger, all around, than the base plates for the building columns. Because the size and location of the columns were dependant on the building manufacturer, this is all the information that the plans contain.
I now have the building details provided by the building supplier. The frame reactions shown include a 12 kip horizontal thrust (DL + LL)at the baseplates. If I carry this load in the columns only, assuming that the soil offers no resistance, then I end up needing relatively large footings to accomodate this load.
How does one normally carry this load? Do you assume that the adjacent foundation wall carries it to the soil and the soil resists it via active pressure? Or, do you anchor the floor slab to the wall and take out the thrust this way? (This is what I am considering).
The building is a tapered rigid frame with a 48 foot out to out span, with bays at 12 and 15 foot spacings. The top of the foundation wall (and top of finish floor) is about 4.5' above grade, and extends another 4' below grade. The floor slab will consist of a slab on grade.
I now have the building details provided by the building supplier. The frame reactions shown include a 12 kip horizontal thrust (DL + LL)at the baseplates. If I carry this load in the columns only, assuming that the soil offers no resistance, then I end up needing relatively large footings to accomodate this load.
How does one normally carry this load? Do you assume that the adjacent foundation wall carries it to the soil and the soil resists it via active pressure? Or, do you anchor the floor slab to the wall and take out the thrust this way? (This is what I am considering).
The building is a tapered rigid frame with a 48 foot out to out span, with bays at 12 and 15 foot spacings. The top of the foundation wall (and top of finish floor) is about 4.5' above grade, and extends another 4' below grade. The floor slab will consist of a slab on grade.