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Reference on Conc. Shear wall on a Conc. Slab 3

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otto_eng

Civil/Environmental
Jun 27, 2017
88
Hi all,

I have a condition in one of my projects in which I need to terminate the conc. shear wall on the conc. slab that is above the garage (foundation floor). I have not done such a design before and I am not able to find any references or examples.
Normally I assume a fixed cant. beam approach for my shear wall calcs. when it is supported by a wall which is bearing on a foundation. I do not think that I can provide fixity in this condition via the conc. slab or would that even be possible ? I know that shear could be a problem on the slab for such a condition but I can provide shear reinforcement...
I would like to get your input on this matter and would be really good if you have any references for such a condition !
Thanks !

* attached is not the full model , just wanted to indicate what I mean with my question..
 
 https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=3b283c04-897b-4ccc-929f-cb9d2886a922&file=reference.png
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In this case , i will not encourage and IMO it is not a good idea to plant shear walls on beams above the garage storeys. The shear walls could clash with the parking areas but still i would prefer the reduced no. of parking place and if necessary , i would prefer to add one more basement storey .

If the only option is terminating the conc. shear wall on the conc. ground floor slab , you may design the GF slab as heavy transfer plate and consider PT.

You may post the typical floor, basement floor plans together wit more info. to get better responds.





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Make it do, or do without.

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Yeah, you're basically doing a building on a podium when you're doing this. You need to do a big transfer slab or beam grillage to make it work.

How tall's the building? Is this seismic or wind governed, and how bad? I have not done this, but I've sat through local case studies on this sort of construction. Be really careful with your R values and building response assumptions if you're doing this in a moderate or high seismic zone.
 
I have done this several times (in a non-seismic zone). The slab will effectively serve as your foundation. In England (EC1 EC2 and AD-A), the slab will need to be designed as a 'key' element, and the walls and floor should be capable of withstanding a notional load of 34kPa for accidental actions. Design the slab as a transfer slab and verify bending and shear as you normally would in flat slab design. The strut-and-tie method would be required if the shear wall is located close to a support (less than 2d). There will be almost no benefit to having a fixed connection in the short direction of the wall (weak axis). Therefore, I would assume a pin connection with the slab in this direction. In the long direction (strong axis), there will be a triangular distribution of forces, and the slab will need to be designed accordingly, including a punching shear check. Construction sequence effects are important and you should read more about. Check on google or youtube 'Importance of Construction Sequence Analysis in design'
Image_04_lt17ih.jpg
 
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