ljk80oze
Structural
- Aug 29, 2007
- 12
Hi
In my region post tension slabs are undertaken as design and construct packages and engineers with PT transfer slabs provide loading plans / outputs for other consultants to undertake this component of the design. Whilst i have next to no experience at PT design I strongly dislike having such a major component of the project being handled by another consultant.
I would really appreciate some advice regarding any measures i should be taking to validate the external consultant’s design and to ensure that the rest of the building is not effected by PT slab movements etc..
The particular project that i am working on is a 5 story residential building with a basement carpark slab, transfer slab at ground and an additional 3 levels of suspended slabs above. The building footprint is about 35x50m. The client has opted for a PT transfer with the rest of the project remaining conventional insitu concrete.
Questions:
Is it appropriate to estimate the PT slab thickness (flat plate slab) by determining the punching shear thickness required for a conventional slab?
What measures are required to control shrinkage, PT shortening, when are they required and what effect does the lateral stiffness of the supporting structure have?
The transfer slab is supported by perimeter basement retaining walls and internal columns between the carparks. I have concerns that the large restraint provided by these perimeter shear walls wall result in restraint cracks in the corners of the transfer or in the wall elements themselves. The client also advised that the previous job they did with a PT transfer had double circular columns instead of conventional rectangular columns to reduce column stiffness and prevent column damage due to the PT movement.
Will I require pour breaks / expansion joints etc to control shrinkage/shortening stresses?? How do I determine whether basement walls and columns will be damaged by the movement (do I apply a deflection to the structure and determine if the induced moments exceed the cracking moments of the individual elements?).
Finally, should I request deflection, reactions etc results from the designer to verify my design assumptions (load distribution)? Is there anything else I should know?
Thanks for your time!
LJK
In my region post tension slabs are undertaken as design and construct packages and engineers with PT transfer slabs provide loading plans / outputs for other consultants to undertake this component of the design. Whilst i have next to no experience at PT design I strongly dislike having such a major component of the project being handled by another consultant.
I would really appreciate some advice regarding any measures i should be taking to validate the external consultant’s design and to ensure that the rest of the building is not effected by PT slab movements etc..
The particular project that i am working on is a 5 story residential building with a basement carpark slab, transfer slab at ground and an additional 3 levels of suspended slabs above. The building footprint is about 35x50m. The client has opted for a PT transfer with the rest of the project remaining conventional insitu concrete.
Questions:
Is it appropriate to estimate the PT slab thickness (flat plate slab) by determining the punching shear thickness required for a conventional slab?
What measures are required to control shrinkage, PT shortening, when are they required and what effect does the lateral stiffness of the supporting structure have?
The transfer slab is supported by perimeter basement retaining walls and internal columns between the carparks. I have concerns that the large restraint provided by these perimeter shear walls wall result in restraint cracks in the corners of the transfer or in the wall elements themselves. The client also advised that the previous job they did with a PT transfer had double circular columns instead of conventional rectangular columns to reduce column stiffness and prevent column damage due to the PT movement.
Will I require pour breaks / expansion joints etc to control shrinkage/shortening stresses?? How do I determine whether basement walls and columns will be damaged by the movement (do I apply a deflection to the structure and determine if the induced moments exceed the cracking moments of the individual elements?).
Finally, should I request deflection, reactions etc results from the designer to verify my design assumptions (load distribution)? Is there anything else I should know?
Thanks for your time!
LJK