bigmikeshutt
Civil/Environmental
- Aug 16, 2004
- 2
In a prior life I was a practicing Civil PE, but have moved on to other things. Unfortunately, I did not do much work in residential building, so I don't have a good working knowledge of the codes.
I've got what I think must be a very typical design change for a home. I am planning on removing a portion of a load-bearing wall (about 10') and replacing it with a beam. I am comfortable sizing the beam, but I am not certain about the implications to the foundation.
Assuming my home was build to code in the first place, I think the footing under a load bearing wall should be 18" wide. That assumes that the developer did not perform for a full geotechnical investigation and used the minimum soil bearing capacity of 1500 psf when designing the footings. I have verified that the exterior wall footings are at least 18" wide.
The soil around my home is a very firm in-situ sandy clay, which means its bearing is more likely in the 2000 - 3000 psf range.
I calculated that total (dead + live) load at each end of the beam is in the neighborhood of 3500 lbs. If I assume that the actual soil bearing capacity is 2500 psf and a safety factor of 2.5, that would mean that a ~4 ft2 footing should be sufficient for support at each end of the beam. That equates to a 2.7 ft section of the 18" wide existing footing should have sufficient bearing capacity for support of the beam endpoints.
That tells me that I don't need to worry about taking up the floor and enlarge the existing footing at the beam endpoints. Am I oversimplifying this or overlooking something obvious?
TIA
BMS
I've got what I think must be a very typical design change for a home. I am planning on removing a portion of a load-bearing wall (about 10') and replacing it with a beam. I am comfortable sizing the beam, but I am not certain about the implications to the foundation.
Assuming my home was build to code in the first place, I think the footing under a load bearing wall should be 18" wide. That assumes that the developer did not perform for a full geotechnical investigation and used the minimum soil bearing capacity of 1500 psf when designing the footings. I have verified that the exterior wall footings are at least 18" wide.
The soil around my home is a very firm in-situ sandy clay, which means its bearing is more likely in the 2000 - 3000 psf range.
I calculated that total (dead + live) load at each end of the beam is in the neighborhood of 3500 lbs. If I assume that the actual soil bearing capacity is 2500 psf and a safety factor of 2.5, that would mean that a ~4 ft2 footing should be sufficient for support at each end of the beam. That equates to a 2.7 ft section of the 18" wide existing footing should have sufficient bearing capacity for support of the beam endpoints.
That tells me that I don't need to worry about taking up the floor and enlarge the existing footing at the beam endpoints. Am I oversimplifying this or overlooking something obvious?
TIA
BMS