FreeRangeMonkey
Structural
- May 14, 2003
- 16
I am currently designing a frame to retrofit an existing unreinforced masonry building. The existing building has been in existence for a long time (50+years) and has experienced the expected settling, shifting, etc, which resulted in some diagonal cracks at the corners of opening and at the pilasters. There are existing trusses which are to remain for architectural reasons, but they must be worked around. The building is a 59'w x 83'l x 20'h box. The contractor has already removed approximately 26 tons of ceiling and there is still about 30 tons of roof. The trusses have thus been relieved af about half their load. The wall span is about 19', with a 1-2' parapet.The frames I am designing will work as a hinged frame in the short direction, with 3 spans; the long direction will be cross-braced. I am leaving a 4-6" gap between the back of the framing and the inside face of the URM walls. I am thinking that I want to attach a ledger to the URM walls, and my thought is that an epoxied ledger would provide a LOT of shear capacity without piercing the wall envelope, which dictates a mandatory full seismic upgrade of the entire buidling, which is out of the budget of the new owner. I figured that by attaching the ledger with a lot of epoxy and them creating a bolted clip connection from the frame to the ledger that I could tie the walls together with the epoxied ledger, brace them with the frame and not have to get into a full seismic upgrade.
My questions are:
1) Are there any resources for this type of work...web articles, code referneces, etc.?
2) anyone have personal experience with this type of stuff?
3) are there any issues I am not considering?
4) can you recommend an epoxy system that would work in this application...or maybe a better solution altogether?
Thanks in advance!
Greg Cashen
My questions are:
1) Are there any resources for this type of work...web articles, code referneces, etc.?
2) anyone have personal experience with this type of stuff?
3) are there any issues I am not considering?
4) can you recommend an epoxy system that would work in this application...or maybe a better solution altogether?
Thanks in advance!
Greg Cashen