WARose
Structural
- Mar 17, 2011
- 5,594
The other day an interesting discussion broke among co-workers over treatment of seismic loads at the foundations. As we all know, we (typically) divide the would-be seismic loads our structure sees by the response modification factor (to account for its ability to deform under loading) but we wind up sending that adjusted load to the foundations and a design soil pressure emerges (i.e. like say with spread footing supports). So how can you justify the foundation seeing that load by the same response modification factor that the structure sees when it is a different system? Is it a case where the code writers are counting on some sort of reserve capacity of the soil or is it more along the lines of the soil may not “see it” because of transmissibility (i.e. of dynamic loads)? Granted the code has different requirements for structural components of foundations in certain seismic design categories (and the geotech also has to keep an eye out for soils where liquefaction may be a factor)…….but this has always been puzzling to me. Thoughts?