The building I am working on is four stories, with a pretensioned slab construction. The client's question to me was how much cmu will be required in the front of the building? The front of the building is very open, about 90% windows and doors. My first approach is to analyize the lateral restraint of the building using only three walls. All the exterior walls are cmu, I have the ability to use any size block. The rear wall is 70' long, no openings. The left side is 26' long with no openings and the right side is 26' with openings.
The following is a description of how I am analyzing these three walls. Please feel free to comment on anything I have assumed. I used a perforated shear wall analysis on the right side wall. My first assumption was to analyize the cmu on a floor to floor basis. I came up with an effective rigidity per floor, and found a center of rigidity on each level. (The seismec governed this building) The placement of openings in this wall is as such: the top of the wall has no openings and each level down has more openings, the first floor has many openings. What I am not sure is if I should consider the force into each wall as laterally restrained into the wall, and retains the force down the entire height of the building. Each level of the building will have a different center of rigidity. If the force from the 4th floor is 40 kips, 3rd is 30, 2nd 25, 1st is 20, how should the force be restrained on the first floor? Should I assume the cummulative force is restrained by three walls according to their rigidity, and then back into the diaphramn to analyze again? If I follow that analysis, I can sum up the forces on each level, 115 kips, and use the center of rigidity on the first floor, designing the walls and footings accordingly. If I consider the force to stay in the wall, not get transfered back into the diaghram, the force on the first floor would be much higher on the wall with many openings. I believe their is enough cmu in this building to use a shear wall analysis.
Another question I have is how to apply the torsional moment when considering the seismic event in the direction of the one wall. The center of rigidity is at the wall so when I calc the torsional force, I get values for the perpendicular walls only. Is that correct? Also, does this torsional force applied to the perpendicular walls get added to the force obtained from the values obtained when considering the seismic in the direction of the two walls? It seems like it shouldn't, since seismic, like wind, I assume to only happen in one direction. It seems as if assuming the building has only three sides is better, per analysis, then assuming a small amount of restraint in the front of the building.
I know I have a lot of questions, any comments would be greatly appreciated.
If you know of any similar examples utilizing three walls with openings that would be of great help.
Thanks,
Mark