Futzin
Structural
- May 18, 2021
- 16
I submit for discussion a large warehouse with a relatively small foyer area, half the height of the warehouse. The warehouse is a steel braced-frame structure. In the interest of avoiding an additional row of columns (i.e., design the foyer as a structurally independent "addition"), I'm considering the foyer essentially as a "lean-to", supported by the warehouse columns on one side. See the below plan, detail, and section sketches.
The foyer will feature a concrete roof diaphragm (architecture-driven). With reference to plan north, N-S lateral loads acting on the foyer will be resisted by moment frames along the west column line (architectural constraint, cannot use braces) and by the warehouse columns in flexure along the east column line. I'm conceptualizing these warehouse columns as simply-supported beam-columns spanning between the column base and the warehouse roof diaphragm, acted upon by a mid-span point load from the foyer lateral reaction (obviously, the baseplate connection is more rigid than the warehouse diaphragm so not truly simply-supported). Similarly, for E-W lateral loads acting the on foyer, I'm considering the warehouse columns to again act roughly as a simply-supported beam, distributing the mid-span reaction from the foyer to the ground and the warehouse roof diaphragm (I acknowledge that I'm showing in the sketches that this reaction would be resisted in weak-axis bending, does look problematic).
Theoretically, I think this works. My FE model is statically determinate and the trial column sections are passing code checks. ASCE 7 code space is where I am unsure. The structure is SDC C, so am using R=3, no AISC 341 special system. It seems clear the the foyer, being half the height and using a combination of moment frames and hanging onto the warehouse, will have completely different dynamic characteristic than the braced-frame warehouse. It seems appropriate to consider a different C[sub]s[/sub] factor to calculate the seismic base shear of the foyer per ASCE 7-16 Section 12.8 ELF procedure, effectively treating it as a separate structure sharing structural elements with the warehouse. Applying the ELF seismic loads concurrently on both sub-structures is probably conservative since I would not expect the foyer and warehouse to have the same natural frequency. Is there anything I'm missing, though? Do the warehouse columns I'm attaching to effectively become "collector elements" requiring the foyer reactions acting upon them to be amplified by an over-strength factor per Section 12.10.2.1? Any other practical considerations? Easier just to add the double column line and design the foyer as a independent structures, moment frames in both directions (architectural constraints)?
TL;DR - What to do when a building appendage is too much of a "real" structure to be considered under Ch. 13 of ASCE 7?
The foyer will feature a concrete roof diaphragm (architecture-driven). With reference to plan north, N-S lateral loads acting on the foyer will be resisted by moment frames along the west column line (architectural constraint, cannot use braces) and by the warehouse columns in flexure along the east column line. I'm conceptualizing these warehouse columns as simply-supported beam-columns spanning between the column base and the warehouse roof diaphragm, acted upon by a mid-span point load from the foyer lateral reaction (obviously, the baseplate connection is more rigid than the warehouse diaphragm so not truly simply-supported). Similarly, for E-W lateral loads acting the on foyer, I'm considering the warehouse columns to again act roughly as a simply-supported beam, distributing the mid-span reaction from the foyer to the ground and the warehouse roof diaphragm (I acknowledge that I'm showing in the sketches that this reaction would be resisted in weak-axis bending, does look problematic).
Theoretically, I think this works. My FE model is statically determinate and the trial column sections are passing code checks. ASCE 7 code space is where I am unsure. The structure is SDC C, so am using R=3, no AISC 341 special system. It seems clear the the foyer, being half the height and using a combination of moment frames and hanging onto the warehouse, will have completely different dynamic characteristic than the braced-frame warehouse. It seems appropriate to consider a different C[sub]s[/sub] factor to calculate the seismic base shear of the foyer per ASCE 7-16 Section 12.8 ELF procedure, effectively treating it as a separate structure sharing structural elements with the warehouse. Applying the ELF seismic loads concurrently on both sub-structures is probably conservative since I would not expect the foyer and warehouse to have the same natural frequency. Is there anything I'm missing, though? Do the warehouse columns I'm attaching to effectively become "collector elements" requiring the foyer reactions acting upon them to be amplified by an over-strength factor per Section 12.10.2.1? Any other practical considerations? Easier just to add the double column line and design the foyer as a independent structures, moment frames in both directions (architectural constraints)?
TL;DR - What to do when a building appendage is too much of a "real" structure to be considered under Ch. 13 of ASCE 7?