Open Storey Buildings:
Why Parking Floors Become Seismic Troublemakers
Every time an RC building skips masonry walls on the ground floor for parking space, it creates a fatal seismic trap. Learn how IS 1893 identifies this problem, quantifies it, and demands a structural fix.
What You’ll Learn
What is an Open Storey?
Walk through any Indian city and you will see it everywhere: a multi-storey apartment building with an open, column-only ground floor used for vehicle parking. Residents on upper floors enjoy walls, partitions, and masonry infill panels for privacy โ but the parking level is bare. This is an open storey.
IS 1893 (Part 1): 2016 specifically addresses this condition in Clause 7.10 โ RC Frame Buildings with Open Storeys. It is one of the most practically important clauses in Indian earthquake engineering.
Why Open Storeys Are Seismically Dangerous
When an earthquake strikes, seismic forces travel as shear through every storey of the building. In a regular building with masonry infill walls at every floor, the lateral stiffness (resistance to sideways movement) is distributed relatively evenly. But when one floor โ typically the ground floor โ is left open, it becomes the weakest link in the chain.
The Physics in Plain Language
Think of stiffness like the spring constant of each floor. Upper floors with brick walls are very stiff โ like tight springs. The open ground floor without walls is very flexible โ like a loose spring. When earthquake shaking occurs, all the deformation concentrates in the softest (most flexible) storey. The building bends hugely at that one level while the rest stays relatively rigid. This is called a soft storey mechanism.
If this floor is also weaker in strength (lateral shear strength), it is called a weak storey, which leads to a storey mechanism collapse โ the building topples over at that single floor while the upper storeys remain intact above the rubble. This is exactly what happened in multiple earthquakes across India.
Soft Storey Failure
Lateral stiffness of the open storey is less than the storey above. All seismic deformation concentrates here, causing large interstorey drift and column failure.
Weak Storey Collapse
Lateral strength is less than 80% of storey above. The open storey columns cannot resist the shear force and fail simultaneously โ a “pancake” style collapse.
Torsional Amplification
If stiffness is asymmetric in plan, the open storey can also twist, combining bending and torsion โ further increasing column demands beyond design capacity.
Masonry Contribution
Masonry infill walls, though not formally designed as structural elements, dramatically increase lateral stiffness. Their absence at one storey creates a dramatic stiffness discontinuity.
Terminology from IS 1893: 2016
IS 1893 provides precise definitions in Clause 4.20 and Clause 4.25. These are not interchangeable โ understanding the difference between a soft storey and a weak storey is critical.
Storey (Cl. 4.20)
The space between two adjacent floor slabs. Stiffness and strength checks are performed at each storey level.
Soft Storey (Cl. 4.20.1)
A storey whose lateral stiffness (Ki) is less than the lateral stiffness of the storey above it. The concern is flexibility โ it will drift too much.
Weak Storey (Cl. 4.20.2)
A storey whose lateral shear strength (Si) is less than the lateral strength of the storey above. The concern is strength โ it cannot resist the force.
RC Structural Wall Plan Density ฯw (Cl. 4.25)
Ratio of the cross-sectional area of RC structural walls at plinth level to the plan width of the building, expressed as a percentage. Must be โฅ 2% in Zones III, IV, V.
Storey Lateral Stiffness Ki (Cl. 4.24)
Total lateral translational stiffness of all lateral force-resisting elements in storey i, in a given principal plan direction.
Storey Lateral Shear Strength Si (Cl. 4.23)
Total lateral strength of all seismic force-resisting elements sharing the lateral storey shear in the considered direction for storey i.
Table 6 of IS 1893 โ Vertical Irregularity Definitions
IS 1893 Table 6 defines seven types of vertical irregularity. Open storey buildings most commonly trigger types (i) and (v) โ stiffness irregularity and strength irregularity. This table is directly referenced by Clause 7.10.
| Sl No. | Type | IS 1893 Criterion | Zone Consequence | Relevance to Open Storey |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| i | Stiffness Irregularity (Soft Storey) | Ki < Ki+1 (storey above) | Dynamic Analysis mandatory in Zones III-V | โก Directly triggered by open ground storey lacking masonry infills |
| v | Strength Irregularity (Weak Storey) | Si < 0.80 ร Si+1 | Must comply with Cl. 7.10 in Zones IIIโV | โก Directly triggered โ bare RC columns far weaker than infilled upper storey |
| ii | Mass Irregularity | Wi > 1.5 ร Wi+1 | Dynamic Analysis in Zones IIIโV | May occur if heavy equipment on specific floor |
| iii | Vertical Geometric Irregularity | Dimension in storey > 1.25ร storey below | Dynamic Analysis in Zones IIIโV | Typical setback buildings |
| iv | In-Plane Discontinuity | Offset > 20% of element plan length | Dynamic Analysis required | Not typical in open storey context |
| vi | Floating / Stub Columns | Column doesn’t reach foundation | Not permitted if part of LLRS | Dangerous companion to open storeys |
| vii | Irregular Modes of Oscillation | MPF <65% or periods too close | Dynamic Analysis required | Can be worsened by soft storey effect |
Clause 7.10 โ Full Breakdown
This is the most important section in IS 1893 for practising engineers dealing with residential and mixed-use RC frame buildings. Read each sub-clause carefully.
RC Frame Buildings with Open Storeys
What it says: RC moment resisting frame buildings which have open storey(s) at any level โ such as due to discontinuation of unreinforced masonry (URM) infill walls or of structural walls โ are known to have flexible and weak storeys as per Table 6.
What you must do: In such buildings, suitable measures shall be adopted to increase both stiffness and strength to the required level in the open storey and the storeys below. These measures shall be taken along both principal plan directions.
The fix options are:
- a) RC structural walls (shear walls), or
- b) Braced frames, in select bays of the building
Requirements for RC Structural Walls
When RC structural walls are provided, they shall be:
- a) Founded on properly designed foundations
- b) Continuous preferably over the full height of the building
- c) Connected preferably to the moment resisting frame
โญ The Numerical Checks โ Most Important Provisions
When RC structural walls are provided, the design must ensure the building does not have:
RC Structural Wall Plan Density (ฯw)
Compliance with IS 13920
RC structural walls in buildings located in Seismic Zones III, IV and V shall be designed and detailed to comply with all requirements of IS 13920 (Ductile detailing of reinforced concrete structures subjected to seismic forces).
Summary Compliance Checklist for Cl. 7.10
-
Open storey identified (discontinuation of URM infill or structural walls at any level) โ provisions of Cl. 7.10 apply
-
Increase stiffness AND strength in the open storey and all storeys below, along BOTH plan directions
-
Provide RC structural walls or braced frames as the strengthening measure
-
Verify: Lateral stiffness of open storey โฅ 80% of storey above (Cl. 7.10.3b)
-
Verify: Lateral strength of open storey โฅ 90% of storey above (Cl. 7.10.3c)
-
No additional torsional irregularity introduced by wall placement (Cl. 7.10.3a)
-
Wall plan density ฯw โฅ 2% in each principal direction (Zones III, IV, V) (Cl. 7.10.4)
-
RC walls continuous over full building height (preferred) (Cl. 7.10.2b)
-
RC walls connected to moment-resisting frame (preferred) (Cl. 7.10.2c)
-
RC walls detailed per IS 13920 for buildings in Zones III, IV, V (Cl. 7.10.5)
-
Dynamic analysis used to capture actual lateral stiffness distribution (Amendment to Cl. 7.1)
M = Mandatory S = Should (preferred) P = Preferred but contextual
Open Storey Compliance Calculator
Use this tool to check whether your building’s open storey complies with IS 1893 Clause 7.10. Enter the storey properties and the calculator performs the stiffness ratio, strength ratio, and wall plan density checks step by step.
๐๏ธ Building & Open Storey Data Input
๐ Compliance Analysis Results
๐ข Step-by-Step Calculations
๐ Assumptions & Reference
- Stiffness and strength values are user-supplied from structural analysis model
- IS 1893 (Part 1): 2016, Clause 7.10 thresholds applied
- Wall plan density formula: ฯ_w = A_wall / b ร 100% (Cl. 4.25)
- Detailing per IS 13920 required for Zones III, IV, V (not checked here)
- Dynamic analysis requirement for soft storey buildings noted
Stiffness Ratio Visualizer
Move the sliders to see how Kopen / Kabove relates to the 80% threshold from IS 1893 Cl. 7.10.3b.
Remedies & Design Solutions
IS 1893 Cl. 7.10 mandates that the open storey must be stiffened and strengthened. Here are the two code-prescribed approaches, plus practical considerations.
| Feature | RC Structural Walls (Shear Walls) | Braced Frames |
|---|---|---|
| Prescribed by | Cl. 7.10.1(a) + 7.10.2โ7.10.5 | Cl. 7.10.1(b) |
| Stiffness added | Very high โ ideal for open storeys | Moderate to high โ depends on section |
| Continuity required | Preferably full height (Cl. 7.10.2b) | Typically within the open storey and below |
| Detailing standard | IS 13920 mandatory (Zones III, IV, V) | IS 800 for steel braces |
| Plan density check | ฯw โฅ 2% (Cl. 7.10.4) | Not directly, but strength check still applies |
| Torsion risk | Must be symmetric to avoid adding torsion (Cl. 7.10.3a) | Same โ must be symmetric in plan |
| Foundation | Properly designed foundations required (Cl. 7.10.2a) | Column base plates on ductile connections |
| Practicality | Most common in Indian RC construction | Common in industrial / steel structures |
RC Structural Wall Plan Density โ How to Calculate
Historical Evidence โ Why This Matters
Open storey failures have been documented in nearly every significant Indian earthquake. These are not theoretical risks โ they are well-documented failure modes that killed thousands of people.
Self-Assessment Quiz
Test your understanding of IS 1893 Clause 7.10 and open storey buildings.

