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You need to be able to deal with the horizontal shear demand on the cold joint. If that's satisfied then I believe that one way and punching shear should be ok.
If you can penetrate the first pour with an internal vibrator then the concrete should be able to bond as though the two pours were monolithic. If not, you may need to consider bonding agents or rebar dowels across the joint. Depending on the size of the footing etc, it may be cheapest to just rip out the first pour.
For your first question, KootK is correct. For one isolated footing, rip it out and do it again. The horizontal shear issue for a pad footing can be quite severe, and is not easily solved after the first lift hardens.
It is normal to cast footings first, then columns after some time has passed. Casting them together is not only difficult, it can lead to quality issues. And column concrete is often a higher strength grade than the footing.
Who is the "president"? Why would you want to cast the column in two pieces when one will do? The less operations, the better. Or is this again due to concrete ordering issues?
I don't know specifically about that book. Maybe the authors just thought that no one would do such a stupid thing in a footing. But I imagine that your book does address horizontal shear in different contexts. Horizontal shear stress in beams and slabs is typically of lesser magnitude than in a pad footing, because the contact area of the pad joint is less, and the applied pressure is greater
ottles said:would the shorter pink building foundation moves along with the rock underneath it.. or would it slide and crush the wall of the tall building?
ottles said:Won't the rock surrounding the basement of the tall building crush into the tall building wall during seismic activity? Or would the wall and rock move together?
ottles said:Lastly. If you will say wall and rock would move along together. Can the pink short building foundation also move along with the rock due to coefficient of friction making it not able to slide (let's say no key or doweled are installed between the pink building foundation and rock)? What do you think?
The rock will likely impart its seismic load to the building primarily by pushing against the diaphragm below grade that is closest to the surface. It shouldn't impact the walls themselves much as the walls will be flexible relative to the rock mass. If this were soil instead of rock, however, then you would have to worry about the soil getting seismically thrown against the walls.
ottles said:You mention the walls will be flexible relative to the rock mass. But isn't it the retaining wall is made up of column and beam grid touching the rock. Let's say the rock impart its seismic load to the column-beam joint portion connecting to the diagraphm.. won't the rock crack the column-beam joint?
ottles said:If it's this you were saying.. you mean even column, beams, column-beam joints are flexible relative to the rock mass and rock will not affect/crack these external column,beams?
ottles said:If you mean the diaphragm as composing of the column,beam, column-beam joint, what would happen to them as the rock push against them? Would the rock crack them? the rock mass is so huge.. could any diaphragm even resist them? Imagine you have a rock in your hands and you hit a wooden toothpick with it.
In my region, it would be walls and slabs below grade at the perimeter rather than beams and columns. No matter though. Columns will also be flexible compared to the rock and your beams should be braced by, and deliver their load to, the diaphragm (slab).
ottles said:Are you saying you haven't encountered this in practice and this is not allowed??
ottles said:Back to the pink short building. If it slides, would it inertia be greater than the rock and break the wall or equal inertia and force? Or would the wall even cushion the sliding of the pink short building foundation (a short period short building)? What is the usual case in practice?
ottles said:Would a building with pad footings slide more?
ottles said:If one is build right next to a building with 2 basement parkings.. are there guidelines how the foundation should be distance from the adjacent building
ottles said:.. but lets' say it's one meter distance.. it's very big and so much space would be used up and I don't think it's the norm in practice.
ottles said:Had there reports where the pad footings (or combined footings) shear into the basement parking wall?