CorrectHorseBattery
Structural
- Jan 20, 2020
- 2
Hi everyone,
We have a project where we need to underpin the basement walls of a +-100 year old two storey brick house. The existing walls are approximately 5' high from existing SOG to u/s of joists and are believed to be 12" wide unreinforced concrete walls with no footing (based on some test cores). The client wants to lower the SOG 3' to make the basement usable. I do not know the soil conditions, but I imagine it is crappy 100 year old backfill beside the current wall and some kind of native soil below. I am familiar with designing structures but not underpinning specifically, but my colleague, who is designing the underpinning, plans to just underpin the wall 3' high with 12" of unreinforced concrete (4 foot segments, 3" of drypack grout, etc.)...
That wall thickness seems very thin to me for resisting the lateral earth pressure on the wall. Particularly on the two walls of the house parallel to the floors joists with minimal gravity load to keep the wall in compression. My impression was that underpinning was usually at least 2, 3, 4 feet thick? Have you guys seen this before?
Thanks!
We have a project where we need to underpin the basement walls of a +-100 year old two storey brick house. The existing walls are approximately 5' high from existing SOG to u/s of joists and are believed to be 12" wide unreinforced concrete walls with no footing (based on some test cores). The client wants to lower the SOG 3' to make the basement usable. I do not know the soil conditions, but I imagine it is crappy 100 year old backfill beside the current wall and some kind of native soil below. I am familiar with designing structures but not underpinning specifically, but my colleague, who is designing the underpinning, plans to just underpin the wall 3' high with 12" of unreinforced concrete (4 foot segments, 3" of drypack grout, etc.)...
That wall thickness seems very thin to me for resisting the lateral earth pressure on the wall. Particularly on the two walls of the house parallel to the floors joists with minimal gravity load to keep the wall in compression. My impression was that underpinning was usually at least 2, 3, 4 feet thick? Have you guys seen this before?
Thanks!