planitarch
Structural
- Nov 20, 2006
- 11
Question about the allowable height of foundation wall on a typical wood frame residential project: does adding +1' wood knee wall above a standard 8'tall concrete wall (8" or 10" thick w/2-#5t&b) effectively cancel out the lateral bracing of the wall?
Some of my engineer colleagues won’t ‘sign off’ on that type of design, saying that without the floor joists tied to the sill plate/ anchor bolt assembly, the concrete wall loses its ability to resist lateral load of soil. They insist on retaining wall reinforcing. However, builders in the Chicago area have been getting by with this detail for YEARS without any special reinforcing or spread footings. Some architects (who I will not name) say it’s no big deal either, especially when you consider how foundation walls ‘step’ down around the back on most of these McMansions with walk-out basements. They rely on the weight of the structure alone to resist lateral load of soil, etc.
Tell a builder he has a retaining wall and he’ll look at you like you came from Mars….what to do? Counterforts?
Some of my engineer colleagues won’t ‘sign off’ on that type of design, saying that without the floor joists tied to the sill plate/ anchor bolt assembly, the concrete wall loses its ability to resist lateral load of soil. They insist on retaining wall reinforcing. However, builders in the Chicago area have been getting by with this detail for YEARS without any special reinforcing or spread footings. Some architects (who I will not name) say it’s no big deal either, especially when you consider how foundation walls ‘step’ down around the back on most of these McMansions with walk-out basements. They rely on the weight of the structure alone to resist lateral load of soil, etc.
Tell a builder he has a retaining wall and he’ll look at you like you came from Mars….what to do? Counterforts?