Canstructural:
Run the important pieces of reinf’g. stl. past the reentrant (inside) corners and embed and develop them in at the far face, and around a bar running parallel to the step. Maybe add a few extra pieces of reinf’g. stl. over the adjacent col./bm. lines to beef them up a bit (some two way slab action) and allow the slab to cantilever, somewhat, to the up turned or down turned discontinuity. Good luck on your stepped slab. If you don’t mind too strenuously, I would like to steal your thread for a moment.
Paddingtongreen:
Boy, you must be an old guy, like me. You actually know what moment distribution is and how to do those calcs.? Maybe that’s how we gained some intuitive understanding of how structures really work, deflect and react. Not that we always got it right on the first try though. Some of the younger engineers don’t have that same intuition, as early in their careers, because the computer doesn’t require that same thought process. Of course, with the computer we can change a few sizes and variables and rerun it in less time than it took us to readjust our slide rules.
Hokkie66:
In another thread, you mentioned that Prof. Richard Barker, drummed your early concrete design into your head during several college courses. I took my first concrete design course from him in about fall or winter of 1963, but that spring he left the Univ. of Minn., and apparently went directly to Virginia Tech. He was really a good teacher and a nice guy, I had some contact with him a couple of times after he left here. I don’t think he was a full Prof. here, and the course I took from him was an elementary conc. design course for architecture students. That’s what I thought I wanted to do with my life until I took his course and similar elementary courses in steel and timber. Seemed that I was better at and liked structures more than arch’r. I never could figure out how the make it canti. 300' without some structure, but that’s what our arch. profs. wanted in our arch. designs.