civeng80
Structural
- Dec 21, 2007
- 745
A portal framed building with concrete panel cladding has a wall about 45m (145ft) long built on a property boundary. It’s about 8 years old and now the wall is tilting outwards and very serious cracks are showing in the slab inside and timber wall partitions are separating from the outside wall by up to about 30mm (1 inch).
The soil in my opinion is pretty good. A safe bearing capacity of at least 200kPa and neighbouring buildings don’t seem to have any structural issues (apart from small shrinkage cracks in slabs).
I have some interest in the land adjoining the building and now the client wants to build a load bearing concrete panel adjacent to the existing wall.
The footing system of the tilting wall is shown (dimensions cannot be verified) but it is an eccentric pad footing with both the wall and edge of footing on the boundary. Now this is well outside the middle third (kern of the section) and I’m pretty confident that the reason for the tilt is because of the eccentricity and resulting moment and rotation.
Has anyone any idea how it can be fixed and how to construct the footings for the building adjacent?
The soil in my opinion is pretty good. A safe bearing capacity of at least 200kPa and neighbouring buildings don’t seem to have any structural issues (apart from small shrinkage cracks in slabs).
I have some interest in the land adjoining the building and now the client wants to build a load bearing concrete panel adjacent to the existing wall.
The footing system of the tilting wall is shown (dimensions cannot be verified) but it is an eccentric pad footing with both the wall and edge of footing on the boundary. Now this is well outside the middle third (kern of the section) and I’m pretty confident that the reason for the tilt is because of the eccentricity and resulting moment and rotation.
Has anyone any idea how it can be fixed and how to construct the footings for the building adjacent?