NCStructuralEng
Structural
- Feb 4, 2014
- 3
I am working on a high end 3 story apartment building. Footprint is long and skinny (70'x300'). So in the longitudinal direction seismic may control. This is wood bearing walls, with wood shear walls. On one side I have plenty of shearwall and also 3 masonry stair and elevator cores. On the other side i have windows...lots of windows. In 300' I bearly have 39' of usable shearwall. My question is...because i have a flexible diaphragm and the load to each shearwall line is attributed by trib area alone; then may i use a different R value for the wood shearwalls on the front of the building (6.5) and another R value for calculating the load on the CMU stair cores on the back side of the building (2) in a different shearwall line. I would usually conservatively go with the lower R value and design the shearwalls accordingly, however, because of the lack of shearwall length, the loading isn't feasible to resist with a wood shearwall. Thanks in advance for your input.