AlpineEngineer
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 27, 2006
- 89
I have a stone sign (5'wide x 4' tall above grade, 4" thick sandstone) that is being set for a subdivision entrance sign. The City has asked for a stamped and signed foundation for this thing. Bearing capacity and frost depth are easy to acheive. What concerns me is our wind loads (138mph) and how to make sure this thing is connected properly to the fndn so it doesn't blow over. I was thinking they could set the sign, form the foundation, and pour the concrete so its integral with the sign base. They had planned on having it protrude 16" deep into the foundation.
I had mentioned the thought of drilling holes near the bottom of the sign (in the fndn) every 16" and running a #5 bar through horizontally in order to help with the lateral loading, of course the contractor doesn't like that idea.
It would seem having 16" of the sign base embedded in concrete would be suffecient. I assumed I would calc wind load from ASCE 7-05 and make sure there is enough mass in the fndn to resist this overturning moment. I guess the failure would probably occur at the sign base by snapping the stone; this sandstone isn't the toughest stuff, but 4" thick is pretty tough.
Is there a better way to approach this? Any ideas? Am I making a mountain out of a molehill?
Thanks guys...
I had mentioned the thought of drilling holes near the bottom of the sign (in the fndn) every 16" and running a #5 bar through horizontally in order to help with the lateral loading, of course the contractor doesn't like that idea.
It would seem having 16" of the sign base embedded in concrete would be suffecient. I assumed I would calc wind load from ASCE 7-05 and make sure there is enough mass in the fndn to resist this overturning moment. I guess the failure would probably occur at the sign base by snapping the stone; this sandstone isn't the toughest stuff, but 4" thick is pretty tough.
Is there a better way to approach this? Any ideas? Am I making a mountain out of a molehill?
Thanks guys...