asixth
Structural
- Feb 27, 2008
- 1,333
Hi guys,
I have a situation where I designed a precast slab to sit on top of four walls and doweled in. The contractor has come back and said they would like to use some false formwork and cast the slab in-situ. My original design only tied the walls to the slab over by dowels and therefore designed as a simply supported slab. Now, I will cog the top steel over so it laps with some welded wire fabric that I have used for crack control.
My question is, should I be concerned with the negative moment that may occur in the slab at the wall. I will assume the concrete will crack as soon as it becomes stressed and will then behave as a simply-supported slab (as per the original design). The contractor put to me that I should lap the wall steel with the bottom reinforcement but I don't think that this is required.
Can anyone see anything wrong with this approach.
I have a situation where I designed a precast slab to sit on top of four walls and doweled in. The contractor has come back and said they would like to use some false formwork and cast the slab in-situ. My original design only tied the walls to the slab over by dowels and therefore designed as a simply supported slab. Now, I will cog the top steel over so it laps with some welded wire fabric that I have used for crack control.
My question is, should I be concerned with the negative moment that may occur in the slab at the wall. I will assume the concrete will crack as soon as it becomes stressed and will then behave as a simply-supported slab (as per the original design). The contractor put to me that I should lap the wall steel with the bottom reinforcement but I don't think that this is required.
Can anyone see anything wrong with this approach.