bridgeengineer2007
Civil/Environmental
- May 2, 2012
- 27
Looking for other interpretations of AASHTO LRFD 10.6.1.3 "Effective Footing Dimensions"...
It appears AASHTO allows a reduced footing for geotechnical purposes, but this will eliminate any uplift calculation...(since the concentrated force is now centered on the footing in the effective area)
When uplift on a spread footing is encountered, all AASHTO says in 10.6.1.7 is to "investigate for resistance to uplift and structural strength". So if the footing is structurally capable of resisting the uplift pressure and the footing is investigated for resistance to uplift (i.e. overturning is satisfied???) then is some uplift in your footing acceptable?
Thoughts?
It appears AASHTO allows a reduced footing for geotechnical purposes, but this will eliminate any uplift calculation...(since the concentrated force is now centered on the footing in the effective area)
When uplift on a spread footing is encountered, all AASHTO says in 10.6.1.7 is to "investigate for resistance to uplift and structural strength". So if the footing is structurally capable of resisting the uplift pressure and the footing is investigated for resistance to uplift (i.e. overturning is satisfied???) then is some uplift in your footing acceptable?
Thoughts?