I've been called on to engineer steel stair systems for the non-combustible portions of mid-rise buildings in USA IBC governed seismic regions. They are usually 3-6 stories, mixed-use with residential on top and commercial on the bottom. There have been a couple pushing 10 stories which were parking garages/apartments. These buildings usually have a certain number of the lower non-combustible levels made of concrete walls and elevated post-tension concrete slabs. On occasion, I see the building EOR call for a slip-joint where the bottom of the stair stringer sits on the podium slab, so that it can slip horizontally 1/2" or so, but not vertically. Other times, I see no such requirement.
Can anyone enlighten me as to when this is needed? Is it a code requirement or an engineering judgment call? And who is responsible for deciding if it's needed - the building EOR or the stair engineer?
These stairs are usually in concrete walled shafts with concrete floor diaphragms. Seems unlikely (to me) that enough story drift would occur to ever need to accommodate it in the stringer connections.
Can anyone enlighten me as to when this is needed? Is it a code requirement or an engineering judgment call? And who is responsible for deciding if it's needed - the building EOR or the stair engineer?
These stairs are usually in concrete walled shafts with concrete floor diaphragms. Seems unlikely (to me) that enough story drift would occur to ever need to accommodate it in the stringer connections.