Download presentation
1
by: Jon Heintz, S.E. & Robert Pekelnicky
FEMA 356 Evaluation PEER Van Nuys Testbed May 23, 2002 by: Jon Heintz, S.E. & Robert Pekelnicky
2
Van Nuys Holiday Inn
3
Van Nuys Holiday Inn Designed in 1965 & Constructed in 1966
Seven Stories, 65’ Height 150’ x 61’ Approximate Plan Non-Ductile Exterior Concrete Frame Interior Slab-Column Frames Masonry infill in four bays Building Instrumented
4
Typical Floor Plan
5
Exterior Frame Elevation
North Elevation South Elevation
6
Evaluation Methodology
Perform ASCE 31 (FEMA 310) Tier 1 screening. Create 3-D linear dynamic model. Determine Modes & Periods Evaluate Torsion Perform 2-D nonlinear pushover of longitudinal exterior and interior frame.
7
Tier 1 Deficiencies Soft First Story (44% of 2nd story)
Quick Check Column Shear >> Capacity Members Shear Controlled Weak Column / Strong Beam (Mc=0.8Mb) Inadequate Lap Splices Minimal confinement reinforcement Stirrups & Ties w/o seismic hooks
8
3-D Model
9
Elastic Model Assumptions
Concrete strength f’ce 150% of specified Frame beams modeled with ACI effective slab widths Interior flat slabs modeled as effective beams (Luo et. al. 1994, Pecknold 1975) Effective stiffnesses used: Columns = 50% of Gross (FEMA 356) Beams = 50% of Gross (FEMA 356) Slabs = 33% of Gross (Vanderbilt 1983) Beam-Column Joints partially rigid Columns fixed at pile cap
10
Transverse Fundamental Mode
T = 1.27 sec. PMR = 85%
11
Longitudinal Fundamental Mode
W/O Infill: T = 1.20 sec. PMR = 89% W/ Infill: T = 1.12 sec. PMR = 77%
12
Plan Torsion Fundamental Mode
W/O Infill: T = 1.03 sec. PMR = 0% W/ Infill: T = 1.00 sec. PMR = 8%
13
Comparison with Recorded Periods (longitudinal)
Pre-1971 T=0.52 sec San Fernando early T=0.7 sec peak response T=1.5 sec Northridge early T=1.5 sec Elastic model FEMA 356 empirical equation T=0.73 sec T=1.2 sec w/o infill
14
Plan Torsional Irregularity
Torsion triggers amplified target disp. Infill has 1” expansion gap between frame. Two models used: one with infill panels and one without infill panels. Models compared to determine whether presence of infill has dramatic effect. 3-D model results did not trigger 3-D model results did not show significant response modification for higher modes
15
2-D Nonlinear Pushover Model longitudinal direction as critical
Include both exterior and interior frames. 2 exterior frames = 40% of stiffness 2 interior frames = 60% of stiffness
16
2-D Nonlinear Pushover Place hinges at all member ends
Use criteria in FEMA 356 for hinge properties Flexural hinges limited by: flexural strength shear strength lap splice strength embedment (development) Include two load patterns Uniform based on floor mass Modal based on CQC combination of Modes
17
Pushover Curves Target dt= 29 inches (10%/50) Target dt= 7 inches
(50%/50)
18
Hinge locations Flexural hinges at base of columns (lap-splice controlled) Flexural hinges below 2nd floor beams Shear controlled hinges in 1st, 2nd, 3rd floor beams Still need to check: shear in columns shear in joints local hinge rotation limits slab punching shear on interior frames
19
Response Spectra
20
Roof Displacement Peak displacement during Northridge
9.2 inches Calculated displacement capacity is significantly less. Why? Conservative hinge assumptions? (actual elements can go farther) Conservative limitations on lap splice capacities? Conservative accounting for degradation (C3) Higher Mode Effects? (not a factor based on our linear model results) Plastic hinge not a reliable EDP?
21
Summary ASCE 31 Tier 1 does a good job of predicting possible deficiencies FEMA 356 does reasonable job of predicting cracked stiffness, in lieu of more detail FEMA 356 NSP yields very conservative results for this building Can PEER Methodology more accurately predict recorded response?
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.