AZPE
Structural
- Oct 23, 2006
- 30
I do alot of basements for custom homes and the ceilings that they want are usually 10' with 24" deep trusses. The restraint force per foot of wall is easily in the 1,200-1,600plf range.
I don't see how the assumption that the floor diaphragm will take the load works. I run numbers and those are huge forces. The other issue is stair openings. No floor framing to restrain it, even if it is in the middle of the floor, there is not a continuous compression member/diaphragm to resist the force and restrain the wall.
Typically when I get loads that are just too high for my comfort level I design the walls as cantilevered and require the contractor to backfill before placing the floor framing and then having a 1/4" gap at the ends of joists/trusses so that the wall can rotate.
Of course this is more costly because the footings are much larger and the wall can be as well so contractors don't like it. I always get the "I've been doing this for 30 years and I never have had to do this!" Of course 30 years ago the basements were 8' ceilings with 2x12 floor framing that was all above grade making it 5-6 feet of retaining, now we have 11-12' retaining! What are your thoughts
I don't see how the assumption that the floor diaphragm will take the load works. I run numbers and those are huge forces. The other issue is stair openings. No floor framing to restrain it, even if it is in the middle of the floor, there is not a continuous compression member/diaphragm to resist the force and restrain the wall.
Typically when I get loads that are just too high for my comfort level I design the walls as cantilevered and require the contractor to backfill before placing the floor framing and then having a 1/4" gap at the ends of joists/trusses so that the wall can rotate.
Of course this is more costly because the footings are much larger and the wall can be as well so contractors don't like it. I always get the "I've been doing this for 30 years and I never have had to do this!" Of course 30 years ago the basements were 8' ceilings with 2x12 floor framing that was all above grade making it 5-6 feet of retaining, now we have 11-12' retaining! What are your thoughts