WesternJeb said:
If the wall with openings begins to take load and is not detailed for ductility (i.e. wall piers, coupling beams, etc.), then wouldn't it fail prematurely compared to the rest of the structure?
You raise an interesting point. I don't feel that the collapse of the return walls represents any meaningful danger with respect to the overall structural stability of the building. However, one could argue that excessive damage to those return walls might jamb the elevator door and/or render the controls inoperable. That might be undesirable in a building that folks are trying to get out of in a hurry. I've not yet seen anyone pay any explicit attention to this aspect of elevator design.
WesternJeb said:
Thoughts from others on how to detail that portion of wall?
I feel that a good, general approach would be to design those wall piers to survive the anticipated drift of the building as we are allowed to do with "gravity" columns in shear wall towers. And I could see this being difficult to accomplish for a "general notes" sort of masonry infill wall with, perhaps, some controls embedded into it.
WesternJeb said:
Those match my thoughts as well, just wanting to make sure I wasn't being excessive.
That depends on what kind of sacrificial / non-structural return wall you're contemplating (it's not clear to me from your post);
1) If you are thinking of the return walls as concrete elements cast contiguously with the rest of the core wall then I would say that most designers probably would detail those elements for ductility similar to typical shear wall zones.
2) If you are thinking of the return walls as CMU infill etc, then it is my experience that nobody is really paying any attention to their seismic survivability at all.
For the front walls of most elevator shafts, coupling beams will be pointless / impossible:
a) The wall piers will usually be too narrow to be able to produce any meaningful coupling behavior.
b) The wall piers will usually be too narrow to be able to accommodate the rebar detailing required for proper coupling (X-bars developed 2 x Ld etc).