DEJ123
Structural
- Sep 14, 2010
- 3
Here’s one for the structural forensic concrete experts. I remember seeing some creative construction that I wonder about. I don’t know specifics, so this will be a little bit hypothetical.
It was a column designed as a 30” x 42” concrete column bearing on a thick spread footing. There were 14 vertical #9 or #10 bars (four corner bars, two more spaced evenly along each 30”face and three more, spaced evenly along each 42” face). There were matching dowels embedded in the footing. Ties were #3 or #4 rectangular ties.
That isn’t the way it was constructed though. The dowels were located about 8” off. Most, or maybe all of the dowels were heated with a torch and bent in a dog-leg shape (two 90-degree bends) in order to locate them in the correct position which, of course, made them useless for transmitting any load into the footing. Several of the dowels were cut off because they fell outside the formwork. The column vertical bars and horizontal bars were tied in place, the forms were put up and the concrete was poured. So, you have a column with few or maybe no effective dowels into the footing, but with pieces of dowel tied to the bottom of most of the column vertical bars.
It’s in an area of very low seismic activity and is now several years old.
The questions are: What fraction of the originally intended design strength is this column good for? What is the likely failure mode? A sudden complete loss of strength or something less dramatic?
TIA,
DE
It was a column designed as a 30” x 42” concrete column bearing on a thick spread footing. There were 14 vertical #9 or #10 bars (four corner bars, two more spaced evenly along each 30”face and three more, spaced evenly along each 42” face). There were matching dowels embedded in the footing. Ties were #3 or #4 rectangular ties.
That isn’t the way it was constructed though. The dowels were located about 8” off. Most, or maybe all of the dowels were heated with a torch and bent in a dog-leg shape (two 90-degree bends) in order to locate them in the correct position which, of course, made them useless for transmitting any load into the footing. Several of the dowels were cut off because they fell outside the formwork. The column vertical bars and horizontal bars were tied in place, the forms were put up and the concrete was poured. So, you have a column with few or maybe no effective dowels into the footing, but with pieces of dowel tied to the bottom of most of the column vertical bars.
It’s in an area of very low seismic activity and is now several years old.
The questions are: What fraction of the originally intended design strength is this column good for? What is the likely failure mode? A sudden complete loss of strength or something less dramatic?
TIA,
DE