ad108
Structural
- Aug 17, 2015
- 3
I've started doing some foundation design for exterior equipment pads in areas with deep frost depths. This particular footing is 8'-6" long, 4'-0" wide, and 4'-0" deep. The length and width is defined by the equipment footing and the depth is defined by the frost depth. The forces from the equipment are completely negligible.
I've always designed for T&S steel using the full depth on footings (when flexure does not define), but it seems like significant overkill in this situation. I use to know an engineer who would design the reinforcement on a face-by-face basis, using only the first 1'-6" of depth as a required design depth. Is anyone else familiar with this idea? Does it actually have any basis in code anywhere?
I've always designed for T&S steel using the full depth on footings (when flexure does not define), but it seems like significant overkill in this situation. I use to know an engineer who would design the reinforcement on a face-by-face basis, using only the first 1'-6" of depth as a required design depth. Is anyone else familiar with this idea? Does it actually have any basis in code anywhere?