A practical guide for structural engineers reviewing reinforced concrete beams in assessment work.
Beam assessment in an existing building is not the same as beam design in a new building. In design, the engineer chooses member size and reinforcement to satisfy demand. In assessment, the engineer must identify the real capacity already present in the member — often from incomplete drawings, field observations, and software output that needs careful interpretation.
For that reason, beam adequacy assessment should always be treated as a demand-versus-capacity exercise. The demand side depends on the reliability of the load take-off, analysis model, and critical combinations. The capacity side depends on how the beam actually behaves in the structure, including slab participation, flange action, lever arm, bar placement, and realistic section dimensions.
At support regions, the top reinforcement provided within the beam web alone may appear inadequate for the negative bending moment. In many existing cast-in-place floor systems, that conclusion is premature. The slab cast monolithically with the beam can provide additional top tension reinforcement within the effective flange width permitted by ACI 318.
For an interior T-beam, the effective flange width may be taken as:
bf = bw + 2be, where be on each side is the least of: ln/8, 8hf, and half the clear distance to the adjacent web.
For an edge or L-beam, the effective flange width may be taken as:
bf = bw + be, where be is the least of: ln/12, 6hf, and half the clear distance to the adjacent web.
In assessment work, this means that slab top bars lying within the code-permitted effective width may be counted with the beam top reinforcement when checking negative moment capacity — provided continuity and anchorage are reasonable and the slab is integral with the beam.
Consider an interior beam with bw = 300 mm, clear span ln = 5.0 m, slab thickness hf = 125 mm, and clear distance to the adjacent beam web = 2100 mm. The effective overhang on each side is the least of:
Therefore be = 625 mm, and the effective flange width becomes bf = 300 + (2 × 625) = 1550 mm.
If the slab has top bars T10 at 200 mm spacing crossing the support, a substantial amount of additional steel lies within that 1550 mm width. When this reinforcement is added to the beam top bars and checked with actual development and continuity, the negative moment capacity may increase enough to remove an apparent deficiency.
For positive bending at midspan, a monolithic beam-and-slab system usually acts as a T-beam, not as a narrow rectangular beam. If the bottom reinforcement looks inadequate when checked using only the web width, the section should be re-evaluated as a T-beam before concluding that strengthening is required.
The key advantage is that the slab flange carries compression. Because the effective compression width is much larger than the web width, the equivalent compression block depth a becomes smaller, and the lever arm between the compression resultant and the bottom tension steel becomes larger. That increase in lever arm directly increases flexural capacity.
When the compression block remains within the flange thickness, a may be estimated as:
a = Asfy / (0.85f’c × bf)
The nominal moment then follows: Mn = Asfy(d − a/2)
In many existing beams, this simple reconsideration changes a marginally inadequate section into an adequate one.
Consider a beam with bw = 250 mm, overall depth = 500 mm, effective depth d = 450 mm, slab thickness hf = 120 mm, effective flange width bf = 1400 mm, bottom steel As = 603 mm², f’c = 25 MPa, and fy = 420 MPa.
If the section is checked incorrectly as a rectangular beam using only bw = 250 mm, the compression block depth is comparatively larger. If checked correctly as a T-beam, the compression block depth reduces markedly because bf is much larger. As a result, the internal lever arm increases and the positive moment capacity becomes higher than the web-only estimate. This is exactly the type of hidden reserve that should be identified in assessment work.
When reviewing an existing beam in ETABS, the bottom reinforcement shown near supports may sometimes appear much larger than expected from the positive moment demand. That output should not be accepted blindly — it must be checked manually against force demand versus flexural capacity.
In practical troubleshooting, the engineer should:
In some cases, ETABS may show excessive bottom reinforcement because, while solving for a section under high negative bending moment, the program may effectively push the compression block downward in order to increase the lever arm — leading to a reinforcement demand that is not actually necessary for the local positive moment being checked. The correct approach is to separate the force demand from the software-reported reinforcement, and verify the section manually using equilibrium and capacity.
Assume ETABS reports 4-T16 bottom bars at a beam support, but the extracted support positive factored moment is only 20 kN·m. A manual check using the actual section dimensions may show that a much smaller bottom steel area is sufficient for that positive moment. In that situation, the engineer should not label the beam inadequate just because the software-reported reinforcement looks high.
Instead, compare Mu with φMn using the actual support section, available bottom steel, and realistic internal lever arm. If φMn exceeds Mu, the beam is adequate for flexure at that location — regardless of whether the software output appears conservative.
Once an apparently inadequate beam has been identified, the actual onsite dimensions should be checked before making a final judgment. This includes the overall depth, slab thickness where relevant, bottom cover, stirrup diameter, main bar diameter, and the actual location of reinforcement.
Older drawings often show nominal bar placement. Field measurement may reveal that the actual effective depth d is slightly larger than assumed in the office model. Since flexural capacity increases with d, even a modest increase in effective depth may be meaningful for a marginal beam. Where drawings are uncertain, the beam should be examined onsite using rebar scanning, pachometer readings, and where necessary, selective verification to establish the real bar depth and bottom cover.
Suppose a beam was initially checked with d = 400 mm based on drawings. During site verification, the engineer finds that the actual bottom cover is smaller than assumed and the bar centroid gives d = 415 mm. For a beam close to its flexural limit, that 15 mm increase in effective depth can raise the moment capacity enough to close a small adequacy gap.
This is why a beam should not be declared deficient solely from nominal drawing dimensions when field confirmation is still pending.
Good assessment work depends on careful interpretation, not mechanical acceptance of software output. A beam that appears inadequate at first glance may prove adequate after proper flange-width consideration, T-beam action, field verification of effective depth, and a clean manual check of demand versus capacity.
Prepared for assessment-focused structural engineering practice by Ascending Consulting Engineers.