Rosco22
Structural
- Jul 22, 2022
- 3
We are building a 16’ tall walkout basement, where the back and side walls are all bedrock, so the only pressure on the wall will be backfill. Currently, an engineer for the project has mentioned 20-30” thick walls and designing it as a retaining wall, but we were discussing the possibility of using angular backfill to lessen the forces on the wall. Maybe even using Geogrid in the angular backfil to reduce the lateral forces even more. We’re trying to get the wall down to 10-12” thick due to the design of the main floor.
Additionally, only the back and side walls will be poured concrete. The front/walkout portion will be stick framed 2’x8’ material. The floor trusses will sit within the basement, so the floor sheathing will connect directly to the sill plate. The back wall is 68’ long, with 6’ long by 8” wide buttresses at 16’ and another 20’ later, making the longest span 32’. Lastly, the entire back footer is on bedrock, and the majority of the side footers are also on bedrock. Only the front footer and a small portion of the side footers are in native soil.
Are we oversimplifying this by thinking the angular backfill will produce very little pressure on the wall, thus reducing the need for 20-30” thick walls with rebar grids on both sides of the wall? Any thoughts on wall thickness and rebar spacing? We’re trying to reduce cost, as the massive wall suggested in preliminary talks is cost prohibitive, forcing us to try and get more creative, but we obviously want to make sure it’s more than strong enough.
Thanks in advance for any thoughts or suggestions.
Additionally, only the back and side walls will be poured concrete. The front/walkout portion will be stick framed 2’x8’ material. The floor trusses will sit within the basement, so the floor sheathing will connect directly to the sill plate. The back wall is 68’ long, with 6’ long by 8” wide buttresses at 16’ and another 20’ later, making the longest span 32’. Lastly, the entire back footer is on bedrock, and the majority of the side footers are also on bedrock. Only the front footer and a small portion of the side footers are in native soil.
Are we oversimplifying this by thinking the angular backfill will produce very little pressure on the wall, thus reducing the need for 20-30” thick walls with rebar grids on both sides of the wall? Any thoughts on wall thickness and rebar spacing? We’re trying to reduce cost, as the massive wall suggested in preliminary talks is cost prohibitive, forcing us to try and get more creative, but we obviously want to make sure it’s more than strong enough.
Thanks in advance for any thoughts or suggestions.