rjmorton42
Structural
I have designed a number of two-way slabs using the Direct Design Method, but I am now designing for the first time a two-way slab using a Finite Elements programs (RAM Concept). The building has a parking garage in basement, the two-way slab at the first floor, then 3 stories of light wood frame construction above. At the garage level I have a number of concrete shear walls as the lateral system, so I feel that the two-way slab is sufficiently braced against drifting.
The DD method requires that interior columns be designed for an unbalanced moment (ACI 318-02 Eq. 13-4) in combination with their axial load. My question is, are there any ACI requirements a for designing the interior columns supporting two-way slabs for a minimum unbalanced live-load moment (or any other moments) if the slab was designed by an FE method and it is braced against lateral drift, eliminating the need to consider second-order effects?
Thanks!
The DD method requires that interior columns be designed for an unbalanced moment (ACI 318-02 Eq. 13-4) in combination with their axial load. My question is, are there any ACI requirements a for designing the interior columns supporting two-way slabs for a minimum unbalanced live-load moment (or any other moments) if the slab was designed by an FE method and it is braced against lateral drift, eliminating the need to consider second-order effects?
Thanks!