ajk1
Structural
- Apr 22, 2011
- 1,791
The shoring engineer has submitted the attached shoring drawing for temporary bracing the earth retaining basement wall of a 2 storey underground garage of a 11 storey superstructure. He has not calculated the stress in the slab-on-grade caused by the diagonal braces to the wall which are at 3 foot centres, about 7 in a row. I calculate a 21000 pound horizontal soil load goes to each brace. The shoring engineer calculates 17,000 pounds, but he neglects any additional force due to the continuity moment in the 2 storey wall.
I find the slab-on-grade is grossly overstressed when checked by the Westergaard equation of load applied well away from any slab joints, based on a modulus of rupture of 9 root f'c.
Questions:
1. Shoring Load:Is it the practice when determining shoring loads for multi-storey basement walls to ignore the continuity moment and treat the wall as pin connected?
2. Slab-on-grade stress: Is it the practice for temporary shoring loads to not use Westergaard to determine slab-on-grade stress? If so, how is the slab checked? All the shoring engineer has done in his submitted calculation is to spread the vertical load from the diagonal wall brace at 45 degrees down thru the 5" slab and underlying 6" of granular fill and shows the pressure on the soil is ok in his calculation, but does no calculation of the stress in the slab.
3. Load Spreader to Slab-on-Grade: There seem to be 2 possible solutions: One is to place the diagonal braces at 18" centres rather than 36". That seem to me the best solution (there are not that many shores involved) and in fact the contractor's foreman has suggested that. The other solution is to place a spreader at the bottom of the diagonal braces. Any ideas on how that might be done, given that there is both a horizontal and vertical component to the load?
I find the slab-on-grade is grossly overstressed when checked by the Westergaard equation of load applied well away from any slab joints, based on a modulus of rupture of 9 root f'c.
Questions:
1. Shoring Load:Is it the practice when determining shoring loads for multi-storey basement walls to ignore the continuity moment and treat the wall as pin connected?
2. Slab-on-grade stress: Is it the practice for temporary shoring loads to not use Westergaard to determine slab-on-grade stress? If so, how is the slab checked? All the shoring engineer has done in his submitted calculation is to spread the vertical load from the diagonal wall brace at 45 degrees down thru the 5" slab and underlying 6" of granular fill and shows the pressure on the soil is ok in his calculation, but does no calculation of the stress in the slab.
3. Load Spreader to Slab-on-Grade: There seem to be 2 possible solutions: One is to place the diagonal braces at 18" centres rather than 36". That seem to me the best solution (there are not that many shores involved) and in fact the contractor's foreman has suggested that. The other solution is to place a spreader at the bottom of the diagonal braces. Any ideas on how that might be done, given that there is both a horizontal and vertical component to the load?