BR_PE
Structural
- Aug 15, 2011
- 2
Has anyone elevated a house on Masonry blocks greater than 6 feet on piers/pedestal placed on a grid with steel beams to support the load bearing walls? If so what code did you follow?
A friend has ask me to be the EOR for raising his house, after reading thru TMS 402, i think the piers should be design as a column with 4 vertical bars and ties at 10" spacing (#5 vertical bars). My friend's contractor is saying that I have over engineered the supports since they have done this 400 times in wind area with wind speeds greater than 140 mph and when the house height is less than 10 feet above grade they have only used 12"x16" blocks with two vertical bars and ties at 36".
When I review the IRC (which I have never used), I get more question than answers. In section 606.6 it states the grouted piers can be 10 times CMU thickness, and in section 404.1.9.2 it states the max height for an exterior pier supporting a floor girder shall be 4 feet.
A friend has ask me to be the EOR for raising his house, after reading thru TMS 402, i think the piers should be design as a column with 4 vertical bars and ties at 10" spacing (#5 vertical bars). My friend's contractor is saying that I have over engineered the supports since they have done this 400 times in wind area with wind speeds greater than 140 mph and when the house height is less than 10 feet above grade they have only used 12"x16" blocks with two vertical bars and ties at 36".
When I review the IRC (which I have never used), I get more question than answers. In section 606.6 it states the grouted piers can be 10 times CMU thickness, and in section 404.1.9.2 it states the max height for an exterior pier supporting a floor girder shall be 4 feet.