omegaeng
Structural
- Mar 3, 2019
- 7
Hi,
So I'm reviewing a raft design for another firm and I don't see the logic in their design approach. I was hoping that someone could tell me what they thought of the design approach and maybe, how they would have designed it.
Design brief:
30 story tower, 100% bearing raft (no piles)
Core walls of tower land on raft
Raft was sized as 1400 deep, and they've left 1400 overhangs from the core walls to the edge of the raft
Rough sketch:
My initial thoughts:
This is just like a giant pad footing. The purpose of the raft is the spread the loads so that it can bear on the rock without causing settlement (SLS failure, not ULS).
The designers methodology:
1) Get total dead, live and worst case wind loads (reactions) and divide it by the total area of the raft (to get an area load)
2) Ensure bearing capacity of rock is okay
3) Check overturning (as no tension piles, make sure it doesn't flip over from wind)
4) To design reinforcement, flip raft upside down, apply the worst case wall loads as a UDL and use the perpendicular loads as rigid supports (this is confusing, see image above - green pen)
I don't understand this approach. It looks like it was sized so it can work as some sort of strut and tie (1400 deep raft and 1400 overhands = 45 degrees). I tried to just take the most loaded wall and to strutted that load out, and got my tension reinforcement from that - but it was too much reinforcement.
As above, I just want to know:
1) Can you understand the logic to the designers approach?
2) How would you have designed the reinforcement?
So I'm reviewing a raft design for another firm and I don't see the logic in their design approach. I was hoping that someone could tell me what they thought of the design approach and maybe, how they would have designed it.
Design brief:
30 story tower, 100% bearing raft (no piles)
Core walls of tower land on raft
Raft was sized as 1400 deep, and they've left 1400 overhangs from the core walls to the edge of the raft
Rough sketch:
My initial thoughts:
This is just like a giant pad footing. The purpose of the raft is the spread the loads so that it can bear on the rock without causing settlement (SLS failure, not ULS).
The designers methodology:
1) Get total dead, live and worst case wind loads (reactions) and divide it by the total area of the raft (to get an area load)
2) Ensure bearing capacity of rock is okay
3) Check overturning (as no tension piles, make sure it doesn't flip over from wind)
4) To design reinforcement, flip raft upside down, apply the worst case wall loads as a UDL and use the perpendicular loads as rigid supports (this is confusing, see image above - green pen)
I don't understand this approach. It looks like it was sized so it can work as some sort of strut and tie (1400 deep raft and 1400 overhands = 45 degrees). I tried to just take the most loaded wall and to strutted that load out, and got my tension reinforcement from that - but it was too much reinforcement.
As above, I just want to know:
1) Can you understand the logic to the designers approach?
2) How would you have designed the reinforcement?