Abstract
South Africa has a housing shortage estimated in excess of 2 million units. This backlog is being addressed predominantly with the construction of 40 m2 low-income, single-storey, detached, state-subsidised houses built with conventional concrete masonry units, regulated by the Application of the National Building Regulations, SANS 10400. However, several developments warrant a reconsideration of SANS 10400 deemed-to-satisfy masonry wall provisions. Two critical configurations of single-storey, unreinforced, bonded masonry walls are generated, based on these deemed-to-satisfy provisions. Subsequently, a simplified micro-scale finite element model is used to analyse these configurations under serviceability and ultimate limit state loading conditions. Characterisation tests of the concrete masonry material, together with numerical fitting to test data and data taken from literature, generate the necessary parametric input. The numerical analyses reveal that in half of the load cases, the walls' resistances failed to achieve the design load as required by the South African loading code. A significant shortfall was found for the out-of-plane resistance against the wind load, as well as structural vulnerability under seismic loading due to the geometric layout permitted by the deemed-to-satisfy rules. This indicates that the SANS 10400 provisions for masonry wall panel geometries require reconsideration, especially given the recent revision of the South African loading code.
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More From: Journal of the South African Institution of Civil Engineering
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