WAstruc10
Structural
- Nov 27, 2002
- 45
I am designing a large but lightweight one-story steel building, similar to a PEMB. The foundation system is augercast piles due to liquefiable (seismic) soil conditions. The slab-on-grade is considered sacrificial and non-structural (so if the subgrade settles 7 inches during liquefaction, the slab will crack and settle along with it). But the interesting part is that this slab on grade over half the building footprint is 4-ft above the surrounding grade level, so there are stemwalls acting as retaining walls around the half-building perimeter to restrain that 4-ft height of backfill beneath the slab. The perimeter pilecaps are below the lower site grade, and there are concrete pilasters built into that stem/retaining wall that in turn support the steel columns & braced frames. My questions:
1. With the liquefiable soils, do we need to include the weight of the concrete foundation system in the seismic analysis?
2. If so, I imagine it would be a 2-stage analysis with the steel structure analyzed separately, but what "R" value would be applicable to the concrete system? I'd like to avoid detailing everything as special concrete moment frames for obvious reasons.
3. If we have to include the concrete weight in the lateral analysis, would we also need to include the weight of the 4-ft of soil retained BETWEEN the perimeter stemwalls? That would be an insane amount of weight.
Of course in typical soils all this would be moot, but the liquefiable issue has my brain turned sideways. Thanks!
1. With the liquefiable soils, do we need to include the weight of the concrete foundation system in the seismic analysis?
2. If so, I imagine it would be a 2-stage analysis with the steel structure analyzed separately, but what "R" value would be applicable to the concrete system? I'd like to avoid detailing everything as special concrete moment frames for obvious reasons.
3. If we have to include the concrete weight in the lateral analysis, would we also need to include the weight of the 4-ft of soil retained BETWEEN the perimeter stemwalls? That would be an insane amount of weight.
Of course in typical soils all this would be moot, but the liquefiable issue has my brain turned sideways. Thanks!