I am doing the foundation design for a Pre-Engineered Building and as any of you know that has done this type of work, the shear/thrust and uplift are always killers. Before, I used to just increase the size (perimeter and/or thickness) of the pad footing until I exceeded the uplift reaction (after taking the 40% reduction, of course).
However, I'm starting to wonder why I never considered part of the wall footing that is tying into the pad footing. At first I thought maybe I could consider the portion of the wall footing from bay to bay (so if I have 20' col spacing, i would using 20' of wall footing) but that seems like too much. Is there any sort of rule-of-thumb to go by as to how much of that wall footing (and for that matter the grade wall also) you can consider to counteract the uplift?
Thank you in advance for the help.
However, I'm starting to wonder why I never considered part of the wall footing that is tying into the pad footing. At first I thought maybe I could consider the portion of the wall footing from bay to bay (so if I have 20' col spacing, i would using 20' of wall footing) but that seems like too much. Is there any sort of rule-of-thumb to go by as to how much of that wall footing (and for that matter the grade wall also) you can consider to counteract the uplift?
Thank you in advance for the help.