HighPanda
Civil/Environmental
- Nov 28, 2007
- 40
I am designing a concrete wall (of just 5m height) to support a staircase taking pedestrians to a footbridge.
At one end of the wall, it is connected to another concrete wall or a cross wall. From this connection, I believe a certain length of the wall (supporting the staircase) next to the cross wall wouldn’t buckle because the cross wall restrains the wall under consideration from moving. If the wall is very long, say 20m, another end of the wall is not restrained by any structure and it will behaves like a cantilever wall and the effective length may be 2 x physical length.
My question is that: one end is restrained and another end is free, is there cut off point beyond which the wall is considered as a free cantilever????
At one end of the wall, it is connected to another concrete wall or a cross wall. From this connection, I believe a certain length of the wall (supporting the staircase) next to the cross wall wouldn’t buckle because the cross wall restrains the wall under consideration from moving. If the wall is very long, say 20m, another end of the wall is not restrained by any structure and it will behaves like a cantilever wall and the effective length may be 2 x physical length.
My question is that: one end is restrained and another end is free, is there cut off point beyond which the wall is considered as a free cantilever????