Steel2Steel
Structural
- Oct 17, 2005
- 16
We are relocating a building in which a slab on grade is going to become and elevated slab. The building mover is proposing a system of masonry piers 24" SQ spaced at 4'-0" OC each way to sit the new slab on. They will grout beneath the bearings at the piers to ensure direct bearing. They said they have done this numerous of times and have had no problems during or after the move nor did they have any problems with the building officials.
We were asked to provide foundation design for the relocated building. When reading ACI 318, Chapter 22, specifically says that structural plain concrete shall be limited to members that are continuously supported by soil or supported by other structural members capable of providing continuous vertical support. Even though the slab may be reinforced with 6x6 W1.4 W1.4 WWF, it is still considered "plain" concrete per definitions section of ACI. I checked the flexural and shear capacities of the 4" SOG for the 4' clear span and they are all within the limits, however the code says you can't do this.
One way is to fill the space underneath the slab with grout or a flowable fill essentially turning it back into a slab on grade, however, this would be very costly. Maybe you could compact the site beneath the building and pump sand under the building since sand doesn't compact. Any other ideas?
Has anyone come across this? This is a commercial building (Dr. Office) and not a house.
Any tips or advice would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance
We were asked to provide foundation design for the relocated building. When reading ACI 318, Chapter 22, specifically says that structural plain concrete shall be limited to members that are continuously supported by soil or supported by other structural members capable of providing continuous vertical support. Even though the slab may be reinforced with 6x6 W1.4 W1.4 WWF, it is still considered "plain" concrete per definitions section of ACI. I checked the flexural and shear capacities of the 4" SOG for the 4' clear span and they are all within the limits, however the code says you can't do this.
One way is to fill the space underneath the slab with grout or a flowable fill essentially turning it back into a slab on grade, however, this would be very costly. Maybe you could compact the site beneath the building and pump sand under the building since sand doesn't compact. Any other ideas?
Has anyone come across this? This is a commercial building (Dr. Office) and not a house.
Any tips or advice would be appreciated.
Thanks in advance