bigmig
Structural
- Aug 8, 2008
- 401
I was brought up under an engineer who designed retaining walls for residential wood framed homes with a 'propped cantilever' method. In other words, the walls are not designed as pinned pinned, but pinned top and fixed at the base. This is accomplished by providing a footing big enough to provide so-called base fixity. The end result is this: the soil loads do make it into the diaphragm, are minor and completely manageable without the use of shear walls and hardware.
After going out on my own, I'm beginning to see many engineers designing the same wall as pinned pinned. These walls are characterized by extremely narrow footings. The obvious load path is 2/3 the load goes to the slab on grade below, and 1/3 goes to the floor diaphragm.
After a half hour of searching the Engtips posts, it seems many of you design like this.
A couple of questions for this crowd:
1. Where does this rather significant soil load go once it gets into the diaphragm?
2. If the answer to question 1 is 'it cancels out from loads on the opposite side of the building' what happens in the case of a walkout basement?
3. If you have sloping grade, the load into the diaphragm will be varying based on your location at the perimeter wall. Do you actually calculate the summation of this 'diaphragm' load from all 4 (or 3) sides and come up with a resultant that you then.....resist? This seems like a lot of calculation and hope that the load will actually make it to the location you want it to go.
4. In cases where you have a wood framed floor that is stacked on top of your wall, your concrete wall has to transfer force through a relatively weak element....a 1. 1/2" thick mud plate with a perp to grain anchor bolt located only 2. 3/4" from the edge of the mud plate. For a simple 8' wall, that is 333 # per foot. Your anchor bolts have to be spaced pretty tight to get that to work. How do you transfer loads to your diaphragm in this scenario?
The reason I ask is that many contractors immediately point out that it takes a lot more concrete to pour a pinned-fixed wall than a pinned-pinned wall. Resisting full time lateral loads (as opposed to seismic and wind) with things like specially detailed wood shear walls and sheet rock makes me cringe. Any input would be helpful.
After going out on my own, I'm beginning to see many engineers designing the same wall as pinned pinned. These walls are characterized by extremely narrow footings. The obvious load path is 2/3 the load goes to the slab on grade below, and 1/3 goes to the floor diaphragm.
After a half hour of searching the Engtips posts, it seems many of you design like this.
A couple of questions for this crowd:
1. Where does this rather significant soil load go once it gets into the diaphragm?
2. If the answer to question 1 is 'it cancels out from loads on the opposite side of the building' what happens in the case of a walkout basement?
3. If you have sloping grade, the load into the diaphragm will be varying based on your location at the perimeter wall. Do you actually calculate the summation of this 'diaphragm' load from all 4 (or 3) sides and come up with a resultant that you then.....resist? This seems like a lot of calculation and hope that the load will actually make it to the location you want it to go.
4. In cases where you have a wood framed floor that is stacked on top of your wall, your concrete wall has to transfer force through a relatively weak element....a 1. 1/2" thick mud plate with a perp to grain anchor bolt located only 2. 3/4" from the edge of the mud plate. For a simple 8' wall, that is 333 # per foot. Your anchor bolts have to be spaced pretty tight to get that to work. How do you transfer loads to your diaphragm in this scenario?
The reason I ask is that many contractors immediately point out that it takes a lot more concrete to pour a pinned-fixed wall than a pinned-pinned wall. Resisting full time lateral loads (as opposed to seismic and wind) with things like specially detailed wood shear walls and sheet rock makes me cringe. Any input would be helpful.