TonyMPE
Structural
- Jul 22, 2008
- 4
An existing building has 3 levels of continuous beams. Every other column originally terminated at the first floor, but those short columns were extended to the roof to eliminate beam overstress. Foundations for the system of columns and beams have generally benefited from the column extensions, but the footings supporting some of the extended columns have become overloaded. Also, the longstanding footing overload at the original construction 3-story columns has reduced, but significant overload still exists and is worse than the overload of the footings at the extended columns. The code-required extent of footing reinforcement must be determined.
One view is that no investigation or reinforcement is necessary because the evening out of the footing loads is a benefit to the system. Considering that individual footings have been brought into noncompliance, this does not square with the code-mandated check of structures affected by structural alterations. On the other hand, reinforcing only those more lightly loaded footings could increase differential settlement, damaging new partitions, and may therefore be considered to be bad engineering. In this view, all of the overstressed footings would require reinforcement, half of which have seen a load decrease. There is a quandry whether all, some or none of the overstressed footings are reinforced.
I've been thinking that I should require reinforcement of footings supporting extended columns that are newly non-compliant, to advise the owner to reinforce the footings supporting original construction 3-story columns and to omit their reinforcement from the design only if instructed by the owner to do so in writing. This view is based on the idea that the building code is imperfect and that I would be overstepping my role if I force the owner to abide by a more restrictive requirement than is written into the code. Also I don't believe that the idea of groups of footings acting as a system is well-enough recognized to favor an all or nothing approach. This approach theoretically leaves future owners with some risk of partition damage and foundation rehabilitation expense, but such risk does not arise from any code violations with the current work. Any thoughts?
One view is that no investigation or reinforcement is necessary because the evening out of the footing loads is a benefit to the system. Considering that individual footings have been brought into noncompliance, this does not square with the code-mandated check of structures affected by structural alterations. On the other hand, reinforcing only those more lightly loaded footings could increase differential settlement, damaging new partitions, and may therefore be considered to be bad engineering. In this view, all of the overstressed footings would require reinforcement, half of which have seen a load decrease. There is a quandry whether all, some or none of the overstressed footings are reinforced.
I've been thinking that I should require reinforcement of footings supporting extended columns that are newly non-compliant, to advise the owner to reinforce the footings supporting original construction 3-story columns and to omit their reinforcement from the design only if instructed by the owner to do so in writing. This view is based on the idea that the building code is imperfect and that I would be overstepping my role if I force the owner to abide by a more restrictive requirement than is written into the code. Also I don't believe that the idea of groups of footings acting as a system is well-enough recognized to favor an all or nothing approach. This approach theoretically leaves future owners with some risk of partition damage and foundation rehabilitation expense, but such risk does not arise from any code violations with the current work. Any thoughts?