sarju115
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 8, 2009
- 2
Hi All,
The client wants to have an underground water tank on the first floor. This is a new RC framed building. The tank has four columns close to the four corners of the proposed tank (approx. 2-3' away from the footing edge). The column footing are typically 5x5 or 6X6' spread footing at 5' depth. The tank is approx. 10' deep. No drainage is proposed for the tank walls.
I am thinking of designing the wall as simple span, with at rest pressure with 0.5 times the vertical foundation pressure as surcharge. Also adding the hydrostatic pressure below water level. Is this the correct approach? Does it adversely affect the column footings (settlement??)?
Thanks in advance,
Sarju
The client wants to have an underground water tank on the first floor. This is a new RC framed building. The tank has four columns close to the four corners of the proposed tank (approx. 2-3' away from the footing edge). The column footing are typically 5x5 or 6X6' spread footing at 5' depth. The tank is approx. 10' deep. No drainage is proposed for the tank walls.
I am thinking of designing the wall as simple span, with at rest pressure with 0.5 times the vertical foundation pressure as surcharge. Also adding the hydrostatic pressure below water level. Is this the correct approach? Does it adversely affect the column footings (settlement??)?
Thanks in advance,
Sarju