learning2geotech said:
What are typical column and wall Loads for a 5-story wood-framed apartment building?
Can you provide any additional information? Maybe a site plan?
The following are estimates based on my experience, I am not familiar with your local environment nor location, ie snow loading etc..
I would take a guess that on the high end, the building width 70 feet wide with a roof trib to exterior walls parallel to the corridor of 16', roof loading: 18 psf dead, 20 psf roof live 5 stories is probably in the 60' tall range with 15 psf walls (unless there are veneers). So for exterior walls, I estimate around 1500 to 2000 plf.
Exterior End Walls: 30/2 floor trib, no roof: 15' => (4)(15')(46+40)+60'(15 psf)=> 6000 to 6200 plf.
Interior Party Walls, these will most likely be double walls, however they are beside each other, so for loading for geotechnical purposes I would figure as a single line load: no roof trib, 30' truss spans, therefore use 30' trib, 4 stories above (don't include for ground level), interior walls typically 10 psf min, 46 psf dead, 40 psf live: (4)(30')(46+40)+60'(10 psf)(2 walls) => 11520 plf
Corridor walls: 4' floor trib, 17.5' roof trib, 60' tall walls: 18 psf roof dead, 20 psf roof live, 46 psf floor dead, 100 psf live: 17.5(18+20)+(4)(4')(46+100)+60'(10psf) => 3300 to 3500plf.
Column loading could include live load reductions, therefore the following is probably conservative: assume 32' span (across a unit) and 30' trib (truss span), normally we see something along the lines of needing beams to support walls above the 1st level creating an open area for commercial use or amenities, so (30')(32')(4)(46+0.5(40))/2+47.5(10psf)(2)=>127kips