jnichol
Structural
- Oct 23, 2001
- 11
Wondering what other people do for foundation wall sliding when you have a daylight basement (supported at top and bottom of wall and able to transfer top reaction to the shearwalls). In our company, we look at the base reaction from the wall caused by at rest pressures, and subtract out any resistance from friction of the wall/fdn/soil weight, friction from the wall dead lodings (ie floors and roofs), possibley the floor slab friction, and passive resistance. If we can not get a FS of 1.0 for a fdn wall (dont believe the retaining wall FS of 1.5 from chapter 1610.2 applies)we increase foundation size to achieve 1.0.
To me that seems logicial, and if anything Im not really sure I believe we are liberial by not keeping with the 1.5FS, but lately we have been competing aginst a full service firm that has a 2'-0" wide footing under the foundation wall for a commercial building with a daylight basement with 12'-0" of backfill on one side, when I would have needed an 8'-0" wide footing. The building is way to long to say that the wall is capable of spanning side to side.
Because of the daylight basement issue, I dont think you can simply blow off sliding or say that you have a slab present which resists the sliding, but maybe I am missing something.
Does anyone have any ideas as to why my foundation is so large in comparison, or is the competing engineer probably just undersizing their footings. Also, what do you do when you compition is obviously missing something in their design. Thanks
To me that seems logicial, and if anything Im not really sure I believe we are liberial by not keeping with the 1.5FS, but lately we have been competing aginst a full service firm that has a 2'-0" wide footing under the foundation wall for a commercial building with a daylight basement with 12'-0" of backfill on one side, when I would have needed an 8'-0" wide footing. The building is way to long to say that the wall is capable of spanning side to side.
Because of the daylight basement issue, I dont think you can simply blow off sliding or say that you have a slab present which resists the sliding, but maybe I am missing something.
Does anyone have any ideas as to why my foundation is so large in comparison, or is the competing engineer probably just undersizing their footings. Also, what do you do when you compition is obviously missing something in their design. Thanks