AndBre44
Structural
- Sep 13, 2019
- 26
Looking for a second opinion on something - I have a basement wall that's retaining 12ft of soil for a basement, with the first floor being an 11 7/8" TJI floor system and the basement slab being present at 11.5ft below grade. Now, whenever I specify TJI joists, I don't consider them being useful as compression members based on the below linked design bulletin put out due to the statement, "A conventionally framed (compression) roof relies on a non-structural ridge board and collar/tension ties to resist the roof loading. This puts the roof rafters in both compression and bending, which TJI®'s are not designed to do. TJI roof joists are designed as bending members only". I'm aware that this is regarding roof rafters, but the statement still stands about TJI's not capable of compression, in the same vein that they're not used as wall studs.
Considering the height of the wall, I would already be less inclined to have my wall rely on the wood floor system due to the high load placed onto the wall (roughly 1150 lb/ft based on a 0.35ka and 125 pcf soil), however I'm receiving some pushback from the architect regarding the resulting footing size necessary for overturning resistance since I'm effectively designing this as a cantilevered retaining wall. I'm certainly aware that the presence of a plywood diaphragm would be what would help with taking the lateral load into the floor, but is the fact that the TJI's are not able to act as compressive members enough to warrant my decision? As someone who's only been in the industry for about 5 years, I'm getting a bit of the "I've been building homes for 30 years and I've never seen this" answer, and just wanted to see if I have a proper leg to stand on or if I'm in the wrong.
Considering the height of the wall, I would already be less inclined to have my wall rely on the wood floor system due to the high load placed onto the wall (roughly 1150 lb/ft based on a 0.35ka and 125 pcf soil), however I'm receiving some pushback from the architect regarding the resulting footing size necessary for overturning resistance since I'm effectively designing this as a cantilevered retaining wall. I'm certainly aware that the presence of a plywood diaphragm would be what would help with taking the lateral load into the floor, but is the fact that the TJI's are not able to act as compressive members enough to warrant my decision? As someone who's only been in the industry for about 5 years, I'm getting a bit of the "I've been building homes for 30 years and I've never seen this" answer, and just wanted to see if I have a proper leg to stand on or if I'm in the wrong.