haynewp
Structural
- Dec 13, 2000
- 2,327
I got into a debate on shear wall footing design for moment. I am talking about moment that is along the length of the footing, not transverse to it.
For a continuous masonry or concrete shear wall, the wall stiffens the footing along its length. To bend the footing you have to bend the wall in-plane with it. But for discontinuous elements like tilt-up panels or more flexible wood shear walls, would you design the footing longitudinal reinforcing for the in-plane moment considering the wall is continuous on top of the footing? I say yes for wood.
For a continuous masonry or concrete shear wall, the wall stiffens the footing along its length. To bend the footing you have to bend the wall in-plane with it. But for discontinuous elements like tilt-up panels or more flexible wood shear walls, would you design the footing longitudinal reinforcing for the in-plane moment considering the wall is continuous on top of the footing? I say yes for wood.