Technical Guides · May 5, 2026

Four-tier battery rack with cross-bracing for seismic installations

Seismic Battery Rack Design: What Facility Managers Need to Know

Battery strings are heavy, top-heavy, and full of sulfuric acid or lithium electrolyte. In a seismic event, an inadequately braced rack can topple, short-circuit, or rupture cells — creating a fire, chemical spill, or both.

Understanding the Codes

Two standards govern seismic rack design in the United States:

Seismic Design Categories at a Glance

SDCRisk LevelTypical LocationsRack Requirements
A–BLowCentral US, low-risk soilStandard anchoring
CModerateMid-Atlantic, some MidwestEngineered anchoring + lateral bracing
DHighWest Coast, New Madrid zoneFull seismic frame with cross-bracing
E–FVery HighNear-fault sitesShake-table tested or calc-certified

Key Design Elements

Anchorage

Every seismic rack must be positively anchored to the floor. We design for concrete anchor bolts sized to the overturning moment, base plate thickness sufficient to distribute loads, and anchor embedment depth per ACI 318.

Cross-Bracing

Diagonal bracing in both directions prevents the rack from racking sideways. We use structural steel angles or flat bar with bolted connections for inspectability.

Cell Restraint

Tier Height and Center of Gravity

More tiers means higher center of gravity and larger overturning force. In SDC D and above, we typically limit racks to 2–3 tiers unless the footprint is wide enough to resist overturning without excessive anchor loads.

What to Ask Your Fabricator

Our Approach

At Balazs Fabrication, every seismic rack ships with a calculation package per IBC/ASCE 7 for your specific site, anchor bolt templates, cell restraint hardware matched to your battery model, and powder coat or galvanize finish per spec.

Tell us about your seismic rack project.