wikidcool
Structural
- Jun 20, 2007
- 50
2016 CBC 1610.1 has an exception that says:
Foundation walls extending not more than 8 feet (2438 mm) below grade and laterally supported at the top by flexible diaphragms shall be permitted to be designed for active pressure.
ASCE 7-10 Table 3.2-1 has a similar scenario in the footnotes -
For relatively rigid walls, as when braced by floors, the design lateral load shall be increased for silt and clay type soils to 100 psf (15.71 kN/m2) per foot(meter)of depth. Basement walls extending not more than 8 ft (2.44 m) below grade and supporting light floor systems are not considered as being relatively rigid walls.
Does this mean the wall can still be designed as a restrained wall but with the lower active pressure, or does it mean it has to be designed as a cantilevered wall? I realize it's arguable how much restraint flexible diaphragms provide at the top, and the connections can be difficult to work out, and there are constructability concerns, shoring, equipment surcharges, yada yada. But to dumb it down to this one concept, what exactly is the intention of the code with this provision? I encounter this situation on small residential work occasionally. There is rarely a geotech involved and we are using default values.
Foundation walls extending not more than 8 feet (2438 mm) below grade and laterally supported at the top by flexible diaphragms shall be permitted to be designed for active pressure.
ASCE 7-10 Table 3.2-1 has a similar scenario in the footnotes -
For relatively rigid walls, as when braced by floors, the design lateral load shall be increased for silt and clay type soils to 100 psf (15.71 kN/m2) per foot(meter)of depth. Basement walls extending not more than 8 ft (2.44 m) below grade and supporting light floor systems are not considered as being relatively rigid walls.
Does this mean the wall can still be designed as a restrained wall but with the lower active pressure, or does it mean it has to be designed as a cantilevered wall? I realize it's arguable how much restraint flexible diaphragms provide at the top, and the connections can be difficult to work out, and there are constructability concerns, shoring, equipment surcharges, yada yada. But to dumb it down to this one concept, what exactly is the intention of the code with this provision? I encounter this situation on small residential work occasionally. There is rarely a geotech involved and we are using default values.