Abstract

Evaluating the structural performance of low-rise RC buildings with infill walls is an essential issue in Thailand, as most infill walls were not designed for lateral load resistance. The purpose of this study was to predict the structural behavior and illustrate the effects of infill walls. Residential, commercial, and educational buildings were selected as representative buildings with different patterns of infill walls. Based on the results, infill walls contributed to considerable strength and stiffness. Most of the infill walls that affected the low-rise buildings were at the ground floor level. The behavior of the buildings that had a contribution of infill walls was found to be brittle until the infill walls collapsed, and then the buildings became ductile. Some patterns in which infill walls were placed improperly led to a torsional effect, resulting in columns in the affected areas reaching failure criteria more than those without this effect. Considering the NLRHA procedure, only infill walls on the ground floor contributed to the building being subjected to a ground motion. The fully infilled frame tended to reach the infill crack before the other patterns. For the UMRHA procedure, only the first vibration mode was adequate to predict seismic responses, such as roof displacement and top-story drift.

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