Sorry for this long post, but I thought I would give the entire thought process behind this detail. Friendly, for the good of the order, comments and critiques are welcomed, even encouraged!
Background: The project required a fire separation wall between an existing steel framed building and a new steel framed addition. However, due to poor soil conditions which would have required undercutting for the new column footings and required underpinning of the existing adjacent footings, we opted for a load bearing masonry fire wall to support new steel roof joist. The wall would be 33’ tall of 12” thick reinforced block.
Problem: Provide an acceptable “breakaway” joist connection so that joist failure in the event of a fire would not pull the wall down and yet provide lateral stability to the masonry wall and wind uplift resistance for the roof joist.
Proposed solution #1 was suggested to me by the Technical Services Dept. of the Heckman Co., to use anchors made of Zinc 710, a metal that melts at 792 degrees F. The anchors would be one of their standard designs, but special ordered in the Zinc 710 metal. I decided against this for my situation because of the possibility that the joist could fail at mid span in a fire before the temperature reached the melting point at the wall anchor.
Proposed solution #2 was suggested to me by the Technical Services Dept. of the Steel Joist Institute, although they did not provide a sketch or “officially approve” it. The detail consisted of a standard joist plate with a “Z” strip of sheet metal welded to the plate along each side of the joist shoe. The joist was to be slipped loose into the “hold down” clip made of the Z strip. This provided uplift, but I also needed lateral stability, so I rejected this too.
Proposed solution #3, which is the one I selected, consists of a standard joist bearing plate with a 2” long section of HSS 5”x 3”x 1/4” with a ¼” thick plate end cap,the HSS welded on its side to the joist bearing plate. The joist can be slid loose into the open end. The far end of the joist is welded to a supporting beam. The upper portion of the HSS shoe provides uplift restraint for the joist (clearance is about ¼”); the end cap provides lateral stability for the masonry wall in one direction and the joist shoe can slide out of the connection should a fire cause collapse of the joist (only the end 2” of the joist is covered). Depending on how paranoid one is, grease or a Teflon pad could be set on the joist plate to provide a better sliding surface, but I didn’t call for that. The project is out for bid now, so I’ll have to see what the fabricators and erectors think of this. I did get preliminary approval from the building inspection department, but final approval is pending.
I had a different detail for lateral support of the masonry wall in the opposite direction because the adjacent existing building was independently framed.