PEVT
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 28, 2008
- 18
I am designing a foundation in a flood hazard area for which FEMA recommends back-filled stem walls as a resilient type of system for this application. See attached sketch from FEMA Technical Bulletin 1. I have planned a 7+ft tall reinforced concrete wall capped with a slab as shown on the attached sketch. I would like to tie into the top of the wall to create an efficient structure. With this detail I can calculate the load at the top of the wall and carry it through the slab to the opposite wall with reinforcement in the slab. Thus avoiding the need for a large retaining wall type footing. Then I consult ACI 360 while designing the slab and it seems to go on and on about disconnecting the slab from the walls due to shrinkage, cracking, warping, curling, etc. The interior will be filled with a well compacted structural fill or crushed rock product, for which I can specify temporary fill on the outside of the wall to brace it prior to slab installation. The site soil is very sound sand and gravel, relatively free of any clay. The interior of the slab is relatively lightly loaded as an assembly space.
My questions are:
1) Is it reasonable to pursue the connection of the slab to the top of the wall?
2) Should I be particularly concerned with the long term deflection in the center of the 34ft slab span given the depth of the interior fill?
My questions are:
1) Is it reasonable to pursue the connection of the slab to the top of the wall?
2) Should I be particularly concerned with the long term deflection in the center of the 34ft slab span given the depth of the interior fill?