Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
More than what? I'm not sure what we're comparing pad footings to.
I've never heard of such a report. Again though, this should be a moot point as the shorter building should be designed not to slide.
ottle said:larger footings have more surface and hence more coefficient of friction.
ottles said:most spread footing buildings should slide.. don't they? how do you design them not to slide without using dowel or key to soil/rock?
ottles said:But in practice.. you don't know if your adjacent lot has basement parking..
ottles said:o I'm asking what are the in field seismic performance where the adjacent building has 2 basement parking and one beside it doesn't have any basement and the designer doesn't know.. so most should slide
I do for my buildings. The new foundations need to be coordinated with the positions and other characteristics of the existing foundations.
OTTLES said:How do you compute whether a building and foundation can slide or not?
ottles said:how many storeys usually before the weight can make it no longer slide? just estimate? can say 6 storey with 2 bays with say 16 feet span still slide or do only 2 storey (2 bay 16 feet span) building slide?
ottles said:Does soil also make it slide or only rock underneath?
ottles said:what instance when the larger building footing can move the small house footing and shear it to bend the column?
ottles said:If ground accelerates in seismic movement, do all structure foundation (whether it is 50 storey trump tower foundation or a one storey poor man foundation) moves the same amount?
ottles said:If yes. Then if there is no slide, then there is no banging of foundation. Right?
ottles said:Would it even have displacement between the roof and the ground??
ottles said:How can the equal displacement principle apply in case of the 2 storey high stone?
It would apply in exactly the same way so long as:
1) The stone had a yielding mechanism that would kick in prior to reaching the elastic level earthquake load.
2) The stone possessed the ability to strain past yield in a ductile manner.
Of course, neither of those things is likely to be true for a two story rock. It is an interesting thing to consider however.
ottles said:So the equivalent displacement principle is only valid for similar systems. It doesn't work for stone building block vs column-beam based building.
And the principle is very much applicable to properly detailed braced frames. They're stiff and they can be displaced beyond yield without becoming unstable.
That is a neat reference. Thanks for sharing it.
I believe that you're misunderstanding an aspect of the equal displacement principle. Nothing about it implies that different structures should have the same displacement. It only says that the different possible load-displacement curves of a single structure tend to have similar maximum displacements. Obviously, a skyscraper and a one story shack are not going to undergo the same displacement during a seismic event.
ottles said:Is the first moment frame building and second global braced frame considered a single structure?