I had actually worked in Asia, where seismic design played an important part in our design, for a few years before I moved to Australia. Things like strong column weak beam, stiffness ratio, displacement ratio, soft story, first mode etc in addition to axial load limit are what we would look at. I remember we had lower seismic requirement for level below basement one when the structural base is assumed to be on ground floor. I am not trying to avoid these new provisions. This thread is not to get rid of the axial load limit for ALL elements but for walls below structural base in particular. I don’t agree with this. Displacement capacity is the reason for axial load limit. If a column or a wall has no drift we can simply design it using iteration diagram without additional axial load limit (we already have phi to limit the axial load in iteration diagram design) This extra axial load limit is purely for earthquake due to its low drift capacity when heavily loaded, so I have no problem for this consideration for vertical elements above structural base. But for the basements that are lower than the structural base, with basements walls and soil all around, the drift of the diaphragm should not be an issue, which is why structural base is assumed to be on ground floor here to begin with, so why is the drift capacity of the columns/walls that connect to it is a concern here?
Also, AS3600-2018 doesn't mention this 20% axial load limit can be waived when you provide confinement as columns. (It doesn't mention this axial load limit should apply to columns as well, which is confusing). So I have to either increase the size or the strength to pass this 0.2 ratio limit to ensure the drift capacity of the elements that drift is actually not a concern? That doesn't make much sense to me.
AS3600-2018 has something similar but it is actual not “axial load limit” but more of when axial loads is over 0.3fcAg walls have to be designed as columns with confinement details. The axial load limit here is for the seismic weight and again, it doesn't say it can be waived by providing confinement.
And as I can recall, we had performance based seismic design when inelastic was required so instead of performing this 'modifying stiffness' simplified method we rather perform non-linear analysis when needed. So this global and local ductility is new to me. Can you walk me through how you adopt different ductility for different elements to New Zealand Standard? For example, if you assume the whole structure ductility to be 2 but you want to see if some walls can be designed as non-ductile, what do you do? What is the procedure be like?