See attached rough sketch. This is a four story brick party wall (3 wythe) shared by two rowhouses. Currently they have approximately matching cellar levels and a floor height of about 8ft. On our project we will be lowering the cellar slab by 4 feet and also bringing the floor above down by the same amount. This means 4 feet of underpinning at the party wall.
My concern/question is the stability of the wall with the underpinning. It essentially has a hinge at midheight. A check of P/A + Mc/I with a fairly conservative value of P (i.e. no live load, light estimate of dead loads) shows no tension on the wall face by a factor of about 1.5.
I've seen this done many times but I don't feel very comfortable with it. The alternative, building a 'liner wall' inboard of the underpinning is an expensive proposition and I don't want to force it unless it's definitely required.
Any thoughts on this? All other basement walls on this and surrounding properties are brick masonry, and probably rely on a similar principle of the P overcoming the flexural forces.
My concern/question is the stability of the wall with the underpinning. It essentially has a hinge at midheight. A check of P/A + Mc/I with a fairly conservative value of P (i.e. no live load, light estimate of dead loads) shows no tension on the wall face by a factor of about 1.5.
I've seen this done many times but I don't feel very comfortable with it. The alternative, building a 'liner wall' inboard of the underpinning is an expensive proposition and I don't want to force it unless it's definitely required.
Any thoughts on this? All other basement walls on this and surrounding properties are brick masonry, and probably rely on a similar principle of the P overcoming the flexural forces.