EN 1993-1-8 Connection Design

Steel Column Baseplate Design (EN 1993-1-8 / EN 1992-1-1)

Design of steel column baseplates under combined axial and moment loading. Baseplate anchor bolt layout, concrete bearing, stiffener design — worked example included.

Download EN 1993-1-8 Cheatsheet (free PDF) Column Baseplate Design Cheatsheet (free PDF)
non-shrink grout 400 × 400 × 25 mm S355 T = 85.7 kN M24 8.8 σc = 7.5 MPa 80×80×10 VE,d 95 kN NE,d = 1,200 kN ME,d = 180 kNm HE300A column C30/37 concrete pad 4× M24 8.8 anchor bolts
Figure: Force flow — tension in upper bolts, compression strut at bottom, moment couple transferred via endplate.

When to Use This Connection

Column baseplates transfer axial force and moment from the steel column into the concrete foundation or substructure. Use a pinned baseplate when axial compression dominates and frame action does not require moment continuity at the base — the column is pinned to the foundation and moment is carried by the frame above. Use a moment baseplate (anchor bolts in tension) when the column carries significant bending at ground level — portal frame columns in moment-resisting bays, multi-storey building perimeters, and crane runway columns are the primary examples.

Worked Example

Configuration: HE300A column (b = 300 mm, h = 290 mm, tf = 14 mm, tw = 8.5 mm); S355 steel (fy = 355 MPa, fu = 510 MPa); concrete pad C30/37 (fck = 30 MPa); baseplate 400 × 400 × 25 mm S355; 4 × M24 8.8 cast-in anchor bolts; shear key 80 × 80 × 10 mm; NEd = 1,200 kN; MEd = 180 kNm; VEd = 95 kN.
Design moment: NE,d = 1,200 kN; ME,d = 180 kNm; VE,d = 95 kN
(a) Effective baseplate area EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.5
fjd = α · fck / γc
α = 0.85 for pad footing (EN 1993-1-8 Table 6.2); fjd = 0.85 × 30 / 1.5 = 17.0 MPa. Plate 400 × 400 mm: overhang c = (400 − 300)/2 = 50 mm. Required area: Aeff ≥ NE,d / fjd = 1,200 × 10³ / 17.0 = 70,588 mm². Actual: 400 × 400 = 160,000 mm² > 70,588 ✓
(b) Baseplate thickness (T-stub model) EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.4
t_req = √(6 · M / (β · fy / γM0))
Flange projection c = 50 mm; ℓeff = 2c = 100 mm (conservative T-stub method). M_strip = fjd · c² / 2 = 17.0 × 50² / 2 × 10⁻⁶ = 0.02125 kNm/mm. t_req = √(6 × 0.02125 × 10⁶ / (1.0 × 355/1.0)) = √(358.4) = 18.9 mm. Use t = 25 mm S355. With t = 25 mm: utilisation = 18.9²/25² = 57.2% ✓
(c) Anchor bolt tension EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.3
T_bolt = (ME,d − NE,d · z) / (n · z)
With 2 bolts in tension, lever arm z ≈ 350 mm from plate centroid. T_bolt = (180 × 10⁶ − 1.2 × 10⁶ × 100) / (2 × 350 × 10³) = 60 × 10⁶ / 700 × 10³ = 85.7 kN per bolt. M24 8.8: Ft,Rd = 0.9 × fu,b × As / γM2 = 0.9 × 800 × 353 / 1.25 = 203 kN per bolt. Utilisation: 85.7 / 203 = <strong style="color:#22c55e">42.2% ✓</strong>
(d) Grout bearing check EN 1992-1-1 §6.7
σc = NE,d / Aeff
σc = 1,200 × 10³ / (400 × 400) = 7.5 MPa. fjd = 17.0 MPa. Utilisation: 7.5 / 17.0 = <strong style="color:#22c55e">44.1% ✓</strong>. Grout pad: 20–50 mm non-shrink grout per EN 1090-2.
(e) Shear key design EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.6
Vw,Rd = fvw,d · a · Lw
Shear key 80 × 80 × 10 mm, a = 6 mm fillet weld both sides, Lw = 2 × 80 = 160 mm. fvw,d = fu/(√3 · βw · γM2) = 510/(1.732 × 0.85 × 1.25) = 277 N/mm². Vw,Rd = 277 × 6 × 160 × 10⁻³ = <strong style="color:#22c55e">158 kN</strong> &gt; VE,d = 95 kN. Utilisation: 95/158 = <strong style="color:#22c55e">60.1% ✓</strong>

Code Basis & Design Decision Tree

§6.2.5 — Column base plates subject to axial compression and moment shall be designed using the effective area method. The base plate may be treated as a T-stub in bending per §6.2.4.

§6.2.3 — Anchor bolts in tension are designed using EN 1993-1-8 §3.4 (bolt tension resistance). Shear is transferred via concrete bearing, shear key (§6.2.6), or a combination.

EN 1992-1-1 §6.7 — Concrete bearing stress: fjd = α · fck / (γc · γM0) where α = 0.85 for pad footings.

EN 1090-2 — Grout pad: 20–50 mm non-shrink cementitious grout. Sand-cement not permitted.
1.
Base type: Is ME,d / NE,d > B/6? If yes → moment baseplate (anchor bolts in tension). If no → pinned baseplate (concrete bearing only).
2.
Effective area: Overhang c = (B − b)/2. Check fjd = α · fck / γc. Required Aeff ≥ NE,d / fjd.
3.
Anchor bolts (moment base): T_bolt = (ME,d − NE,d · z) / (n · z). M24 8.8 minimum. Check embedment length per EN 1992-1-1.
4.
Shear key: Use shear key (not friction) for moment baseplates. Size weld: Vw,Rd = fvw,d · a · Lw.
5.
Grout pad: 20–50 mm non-shrink grout. Level to 1/500 before grouting. Check σc ≤ fjd.
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Design Summary — HE300A / S355 / C30/37

Configuration: HE300A (b=300, h=290, tf=14); baseplate 400×400×25 S355; 4× M24 8.8 anchor bolts; NEd=1,200 kN; MEd=180 kNm; VEd=95 kN; C30/37 concrete.
Concrete bearing (σc / fjd)
7.5 / 17.0 MPa 44.1% ✓
Baseplate thickness (T-stub)
t_req=18.9 / t=25mm 57.2% ✓
Anchor bolt tension (M24 8.8)
85.7 / 203 kN 42.2% ✓
Shear key weld (a=6mm, Lw=160mm)
95 / 158 kN 60.1% ✓

Bolt Capacity Reference

γM2 = 1.25; fub per EN ISO 4014/4017; Ft,Rd per EN 1993-1-8 3.4.1; Fv,Rd in double shear

BoltGraded (mm)As (mm²)Ft,Rd (kN)Fv,Rd (kN)
M168.816157113.088.9
M1610.916157141.388.9
M208.820245176.4138.2
M2010.920245220.5138.2
M248.824353254.2199.0
M2410.924353317.7199.0

Common Failure Modes

Concrete bearing failure
Governing limit for large axial force. Increase baseplate area before anchor bolt diameter. Minimum 20 mm plate projections per side to develop effective area.
Anchor bolt pull-out / breakout
Required embedment length per EN 1992-1-1 often governs the anchor bolt specification over bolt capacity itself. Check concrete cone failure and bond stress simultaneously.
Baseplate bending — thin plate
T-stub model: if baseplate thickness is insufficient, the plate yields before the concrete does. For 400×400 baseplate under HE300A, minimum 20 mm S355. Use stiffener gussets under the column web if >25 mm would be needed.
Weld failure at column-to-plate
Full penetration weld required at column base ring per EN 1993-1-8. Minimum 8 mm fillet as fabrication tolerance. Use backing plate if full penetration is not achievable in the field.

Detailing Gotchas

  • Grout pad must be non-shrink grout (not sand-cement) — shrinkage cracking creates stress concentrations under loading (EN 1090-2)
  • Anchor bolt projection above plate: minimum 100 mm to accommodate nut, washer, and any leveling plate
  • Stiffener gussets (triangular or trapezoidal) under column web: required when t_baseplate > 25 mm would be needed for economy
  • Levelness tolerance: baseplate must be levelled to 1/500 before grouting — out-of-level causes eccentric loading and tension on one side
  • Shear key sizing: use shear key (not friction) for moment baseplates — friction coefficient is unreliable for robustness and may not be mobilised under cyclic loads

Frequently Asked Questions

When is a column baseplate moment-resisting (anchor bolts in tension)?
A column baseplate requires anchor bolts in tension when the column carries significant bending at ground level. The clearest signal is a moment ME,d that creates an eccentricity e = ME,d / NE,d greater than approximately one-third of the baseplate dimension in the direction of bending. In practice, this includes: all columns in moment-resisting frames (portal frame eaves columns, multi-storey perimeter columns), all columns in cross-braced frames where the brace anchors are in the ground, and columns supporting significant lateral loads (crane columns, wind frames). Pinned baseplates are used for simple frames where the frame above provides the moment capacity and the base is free to rotate.
How is the T-stub model used for baseplate bending per EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.4?
The T-stub model treats the baseplate as an equivalent T-section cantilevering from the column face. The effective length ℓeff is determined by the geometry of the projection beyond the column — typically ℓeff = 2c where c is the projection beyond the column flange, or m = c for a single cantilever strip. The design moment per unit width is M = fjd · c² / 2 (for a cantilever). The required thickness is t_req = √(6M / (β · fy / γM0)) where β = 1 for elastic analysis, β = 0.5 for plastic analysis. For the worked example: c = 50 mm, fjd = 17 MPa → t_req = √(6 × 0.02125 × 10⁶ / (1.0 × 355)) = 18.9 mm. The governing thickness check governs over the concrete bearing check for most practical proportions.
Pinned or moment baseplate — how do I decide?
The decision hinges on the structural model. If the frame above is analysed as pinned at the base (portal frame with rigid eaves connection, simple multi-storey frame), use a pinned baseplate — concrete bearing only, no anchor bolt tension design required. If the frame is analysed as moment-connected at the base (moment-resisting frame, continuous column), use a moment baseplate — anchor bolts carry tension, baseplate carries bending from compression zone to tension bolts. The worst mistake is analysing a frame as pinned-base but then building in moment continuity at the column base — this results in a baseplate designed for compression only but actually carrying moment.
What grout pad thickness is required under a baseplate?
EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.5 specifies a minimum grout thickness of 20 mm and maximum of 50 mm for a mortar or grout pad under a baseplate. The grout must be non-shrink (otherwise shrinkage creates a gap and voids under load — the baseplate would bear on the high spots only, dramatically increasing local stress). Sand-cement mortar is not acceptable: it shrinks during curing. Use a proprietary cementitious non-shrink grout (e.g. Sika, Mapei, or Bekaert structural grout range). Level the baseplate to 1/500 flatness tolerance before grouting; after the grout cures, the baseplate must be checked again before column erection.
When should a shear key be used instead of friction for shear transfer?
For pinned baseplates with moderate shear (VE,d < 0.4 · NE,d), friction can be used if the foundation design accounts for it. For moment baseplates, always use a shear key — friction is unreliable under cyclic loads and cannot be counted on when tension exists in the anchor bolts (bolt tension reduces normal force and hence friction capacity). EN 1993-1-8 §6.2.6 permits a shear key to be treated as a structural component. Size the key using Vw,Rd = fvw,d · a · Lw where a is the fillet weld throat and Lw is the effective weld length. For the worked example: a = 6 mm, Lw = 160 mm → Vw,Rd = 158 kN against VE,d = 95 kN (60% utilisation).

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Steel Sections for This Connection
HEB 300 HEM 280 HEB 240 HEA 300 All 152 →