The purpose of this Chapter is to promote public welfare and
safety by reducing the risk of death or injury that may result from
the effects of earthquakes on existing wood-frame multi-story buildings
with soft, weak or open front walls (soft story buildings). This Chapter
creates minimum standards to mitigate hazards from structural deficiencies
in soft story, weak or open front wall buildings. Adherence to these
minimum standards will improve the performance of these buildings
during earthquakes and reduce, but not necessarily prevent the loss
of life, injury or earthquake-related damage.
(Added by Ord. No. 2537CCS §
5, adopted 3/28/17)
(a) The
provisions of this Chapter shall apply to all buildings of wood-frame
construction, or wood-frame portions thereof, where:
(1) The structure was built under building code standards enacted before
November 10, 1980; and
(2) The ground floor portion of the structure contains parking or other
similar open floor space that causes soft, weak or open-front wall
lines, and there exists one or more stories above.
(b) Buildings described in subsection
(a) have completed all required seismic retrofit work, with a lateral load resisting analysis and structural design plans, and obtained valid final approval from the City of Santa Monica prior to the adoption of the ordinance codified in this Chapter, are exempt from the requirements this Chapter, except that:
(1) Buildings with pole structures supporting the soft, weak or open
front walls shall be subject to this Chapter regardless of previous
retrofit status;
(2) Buildings of three or more stories having horizontal structural irregularities
of Type 2, 3, 4, or 5 listed in ASCE 7-10 "Horizontal Structural Irregularities"
Table 12.3-1, shall be subject to this Chapter regardless of previous
retrofit status.
(c) An owner of any buildings within the scope of this Chapter shall demonstrate compliance with the mandatory seismic retrofit requirements of this Chapter, as set forth in Section
8.72.050, consistent with the time limits set forth in this Chapter.
(Added by Ord. No. 2537CCS §
5, adopted 3/28/17)
"ASCE 7-10 (March 7, 2013)"
is a standards publication by the American Society of Civil
Engineers entitled "Minimum Design Loads for Buildings and Other Structures."
It provides requirements for general structural design. This publication
is referenced in Chapter 35 of the
California Building Code.
"Cripple wall"
is a wood-framed stud wall extending from the top of the
foundation wall to the underside of the lowest floor framing of the
building.
"Ground floor"
is any floor within the wood-frame portion of a building
whose elevation is immediately accessible from an adjacent grade by
vehicles or pedestrians. The ground floor portion of the structure
does not include any floor that is completely below adjacent grades.
"Open-front wall line"
is an exterior wall line, without vertical elements of the
lateral force-resisting system, which requires tributary seismic forces
to be resisted by diaphragm rotation or excessive cantilever beyond
parallel lines of shear walls. Diaphragms that cantilever more than
twenty-five percent of the distance between lines of lateral force
resisting elements from which the diaphragm cantilevers shall be considered
excessive. Exterior exit balconies of six feet or less in width shall
not be considered excessive cantilevers.
"Soft wall line"
is a wall line, the lateral stiffness of which is less than
what is required by story drift limitations or deformation compatibility
requirements of this Chapter. In lieu of the engineering analysis
required by this Chapter to determine whether a wall line's lateral
stiffness is less than the aforementioned story drift limitations
or deformation compatibility requirements, a soft wall line may be
defined as a wall line in a story where the wall stiffness is less
than seventy percent of the stiffness of the exterior wall above for
the direction under consideration.
"Story"
is as defined in the
California Building Code, but includes
any basement or underfloor space of a building with cripple walls
exceeding four feet in height.
"Story strength"
is the total strength of all seismic-resisting elements sharing
the same story shear in the direction under consideration.
"Wall line"
is any length of a wall along a principal axis of the building
used to provide resistance to lateral loads.
"Weak wall line"
is a wall line at the ground floor where the wall strength
is less than eighty percent of the strength of the wall above in the
direction under consideration.
(Added by Ord. No. 2537CCS §
5, adopted 3/28/17)
(a) Scope of Analysis. This Chapter requires the alteration, repair,
retrofit, replacement or addition of structural elements and their
connections to meet the strength and stiffness requirements set forth
in this Chapter, except as modified herein. The structural evaluation
required by this Chapter shall analyze and identify structural deficiencies
in accordance with ASCE 7-10. As part of the structural evaluation,
the lateral-load-path analysis shall include the resisting elements
and connections from the wood diaphragm immediately above any soft,
weak or open wall lines to the foundation. Stories above the weak
wall line shall be considered in the analysis but need not be structurally
strengthened.
(b) Design Base Shear and Design Parameters. The design force
in a given direction shall be seventy-five percent of the design base
shear specified in the seismic provision of ASCE 7-10. The value of
response modification coefficient, R, need not be less than 3.5, provided
the strengthening systems are not cantilevered column systems and
the strengthened structure will not have vertical structural irregularities
of either Type 1a, 1b, 5a or 5b listed in ASCE 7-10, "Vertical Structural
Irregularities" Table 12.3-2.
(c) Lateral Vertical Systems. Strengthening systems with concrete
walls or masonry walls, or steel braced frames shall not be permitted.
(d) Horizontal Structural Irregularities in Buildings with Three or More
Stories. Structures with three or more stories having horizontal
structural irregularities of either Type 2, 3, 4, or 5 listed in ASCE
7-10, "Horizontal Structural Irregularities" Table 12.3-1, shall be
altered to meet the additional requirements of those sections referenced
in the table for the entire story with weak or open wall lines.
(e) Alternate Analysis, Base Shear and Design Parameters. Alternate
design methodologies that improve the whole first story seismic performance
that are at least equivalent to those prescribed by this Chapter and
that achieve the life safety objectives established by this Chapter
may be submitted to the City for alternative analysis for base shear
and design parameters.
(f) Additional Anchorage Requirements for Buildings on Hillsides. Where any portion of a building within the scope of this Chapter
is constructed on or into a slope steeper than one-unit vertical in
three units horizontal (thirty-three percent slope), the lateral-force-resisting
system, at and below the base level diaphragm, shall also be analyzed
for the effects of concentrated lateral loads caused at the building
base from the hillside conditions and comply with the provisions of
the City of Santa Monica Building Code.
(g) Story Drift Limitations. The calculated story drift for each
retrofitted story shall not exceed the allowable deformation compatible
with all vertical load-resisting elements and 0.025 times the story
height. The calculated story drift shall not be reduced by the effects
of horizontal diaphragm stiffness, but shall be increased when these
effects produce rotation. Drift calculations shall be in accordance
with ASCE 7-10 requirements.
(h) Pole Structures. The effects of rotation and soil stiffness
shall be included in the calculated story drift where lateral loads
are resisted by vertical elements whose required depth of embedment
is determined by pole formulas. The coefficient of subgrade reaction
used in deflection calculations shall be based on an approved geotechnical
investigation conducted in accordance with approved geotechnical engineering
reports.
(i) P-Delta Effect. The requirements of the California Building
Code shall apply, except as modified herein. All structural framing
elements and their connections not required by the design to be part
of the lateral force resisting system shall be designed and detailed
to be adequate to maintain support of design dead plus live loads
when subject to the expected deformations caused by seismic forces.
The stress analysis of cantilever columns shall use an effective length
factor of 2.1 for the direction normal to the axis of the beam.
(j) Ties, Continuity and Collectors. All parts of the structure
included in the scope of analysis shall be interconnected and the
connection shall be capable of resisting the seismic force created
by the parts being connected as required per the California Building
Code.
(Added by Ord. No. 2537CCS §
5, adopted 3/28/17)
The owner of any building covered by this Chapter shall comply
with the following time limits.
Action by Building Owner
|
Time Limits from Date of Service of Order
|
---|
Structural Evaluation Report
|
4 Years or 48 Months
|
Application for Building Permit and Submission of Plans
|
5 Years or 60 Months
|
Final Approval
|
8 Years or 96 Months
|
(Added by Ord. No. 2537CCS §
5, adopted 3/28/17; amended by Ord. No. 2689CCS § 4, adopted 1/25/22)