dsumerfi
Structural
- Oct 28, 2010
- 3
An owner wants to construct a 1-story wood-framed building against an existing 10' cantilevered site wall that is restraining 6' of soil. The wall has been there for at least a decade. I have the design criteria for the existing wall, which used 35 pcf active pressure. The wall is appropriately drained. There is no reinforcing at the front face of the wall. Is it necessary to strengthen the front face of the wall so that it meets the positive-moment demand that would be appropriate for a new restrained retaining wall with at-rest pressures? Or is it reasonable to say that the wall has already "rotated" or "stabilized" into its active pressure condition, and that the new structure won't really be restraining any future movement?
I should also mention that we're in a region of moderate seismicity, SDC C, so any increased retaining pressure from a seismic event would put the midspan of newly-restrained wall into positive moment where there is no reinforcing (this is the part that makes me uncomfortable).
Thanks!
I should also mention that we're in a region of moderate seismicity, SDC C, so any increased retaining pressure from a seismic event would put the midspan of newly-restrained wall into positive moment where there is no reinforcing (this is the part that makes me uncomfortable).
Thanks!