Okiryu
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 13, 2013
- 1,094
Hi, I have a 2-story structure with high column loads (D+L=1,050kN). The wall loads are around 90kN/m. The structure will be like a box (rectangular-shaped building with continous footings for walls and independent footings for columns)
I have CL and CH soils for this site and am planning to provide 2 allowable bearing pressures: one for the columns (independent footings) and other for the walls (continuos footings). My intent is to provide higher allowable bearing pressures for the walls than the columns in order to keep differential settlements lesser than the typical 12 mm. I do not know the column spacing so I have not calculated the deflection ratios (delta/L) yet.
My question is: do you think that providing 2 allowable bearing pressures for the same structure is acceptable? Do you think that this can cause confusion to the structural designer?
I have CL and CH soils for this site and am planning to provide 2 allowable bearing pressures: one for the columns (independent footings) and other for the walls (continuos footings). My intent is to provide higher allowable bearing pressures for the walls than the columns in order to keep differential settlements lesser than the typical 12 mm. I do not know the column spacing so I have not calculated the deflection ratios (delta/L) yet.
My question is: do you think that providing 2 allowable bearing pressures for the same structure is acceptable? Do you think that this can cause confusion to the structural designer?