CURVEB
Structural
- Jul 29, 2013
- 133
I have a condition where we have 3 north/south masonry shear walls, 2 on each side of a flexible diaphragm, and one in the middle. The one in the middle is short and has openings, therefore is much more flexible than the 2 on each edge. The problem is that due to flexible diaphragm behavior, the middle wall takes a full 1/2 of the tributary width of the diaphragm, but it is the weakest wall. TMS 402 section 1.17.3 states that masonry elements MUST participate in the LFRS unless they are isolated in their own plane. This is a low-seismic building, but has pretty high wind loads due to tall parapets. We are struggling to get the middle wall to work, even as a full-grouted shear wall with horizontal reinforcement. My questions are:
1) Do people generally try to show that the diaphragm meets the criteria of a rigid diaphragm so that the load can be distributed based on stiffness instead of tributary area, even if the diaphragm would be classified as flexible (bare metal roof deck)?
2) Are you aware of any code provisions that allow the wall to be classified as non-participating, even if it is attached to the diaphragm?
3) What manner of isolation is normally used for this condition? It is supporting some gravity loads, so I would think any manner of attaching the diaphragm to the wall would need to be low-friction to prevent transmitting any lateral forces into the wall.
The attached file shows the rough layout of this structure.
Thank you for your thoughts and suggestions.
1) Do people generally try to show that the diaphragm meets the criteria of a rigid diaphragm so that the load can be distributed based on stiffness instead of tributary area, even if the diaphragm would be classified as flexible (bare metal roof deck)?
2) Are you aware of any code provisions that allow the wall to be classified as non-participating, even if it is attached to the diaphragm?
3) What manner of isolation is normally used for this condition? It is supporting some gravity loads, so I would think any manner of attaching the diaphragm to the wall would need to be low-friction to prevent transmitting any lateral forces into the wall.
The attached file shows the rough layout of this structure.
Thank you for your thoughts and suggestions.