MAB70
Structural
- Aug 19, 2019
- 25
Hello everyone,
I’m working on a building where shear walls are the primary lateral force-resisting system for seismic loads. My goal is to let the shear walls handle most, if not all, of the lateral load, potentially reducing seismic design requirements on the columns. I’m aware that Eurocode 8 provides a specific 15% threshold for secondary seismic elements, where columns might be considered non-seismic if they carry less than 15% of the lateral force.
However, in American codes (ACI 318, ASCE 7, and IBC), I haven’t found a similar explicit rule. ASCE 7 requires load distribution based on stiffness, which implies columns should be designed for the portion of load they attract, but I’m curious how practitioners approach this. Here are a few questions:
1. Have you used a stiffness-based analysis to demonstrate that columns attract minimal seismic load and could be excluded from seismic detailing? If so, how did you document this approach to align with ACI or ASCE requirements?
2. Is pinning column ends T&B a viable strategy to limit their participation in lateral resistance and channel more load into the shear walls? Are there any practical challenges or code implications with this approach?
3. What’s your interpretation of treating columns as “secondary seismic elements” in American practice? Do you apply similar thresholds (e.g., Eurocode’s 15%) to justify this, or do you have another method of ensuring code compliance?
I’d love to hear your perspectives on handling this design issue, particularly any code references or practical advice you can share.
Thanks!
I’m working on a building where shear walls are the primary lateral force-resisting system for seismic loads. My goal is to let the shear walls handle most, if not all, of the lateral load, potentially reducing seismic design requirements on the columns. I’m aware that Eurocode 8 provides a specific 15% threshold for secondary seismic elements, where columns might be considered non-seismic if they carry less than 15% of the lateral force.
However, in American codes (ACI 318, ASCE 7, and IBC), I haven’t found a similar explicit rule. ASCE 7 requires load distribution based on stiffness, which implies columns should be designed for the portion of load they attract, but I’m curious how practitioners approach this. Here are a few questions:
1. Have you used a stiffness-based analysis to demonstrate that columns attract minimal seismic load and could be excluded from seismic detailing? If so, how did you document this approach to align with ACI or ASCE requirements?
2. Is pinning column ends T&B a viable strategy to limit their participation in lateral resistance and channel more load into the shear walls? Are there any practical challenges or code implications with this approach?
3. What’s your interpretation of treating columns as “secondary seismic elements” in American practice? Do you apply similar thresholds (e.g., Eurocode’s 15%) to justify this, or do you have another method of ensuring code compliance?
I’d love to hear your perspectives on handling this design issue, particularly any code references or practical advice you can share.
Thanks!