Engineerataltitude
Structural
- Oct 31, 2008
- 83
I have a retrofit addition to a commercial building in Southern California that has been in place since 2000 where we are adding load to a TS columnn/pad footing which causes the soil bearing allowable to go to 2092 psf. The footing was originally designed with the '97 UBC/CBC permitted SB allowable of 2000 psf without a soils report, so no soils report was ever done. Both footing and TS column calc out great otherwise. Building shows no signs of settlement anywhere and there are no indicators of soil concerns (such as moisture, drainage, fill, etc.) anywhere on the site. This footing is on the interior of the building under a concrete slab floor and would cause significant disruption of use to underpin. I'd hate to tell my client he has to initiate a soils investigation for this small of an overload (+4.6%). My gut tells me that it will be just fine, that the actual soil bearing capacity is in excess of 2092 psf, but I suspect I should show up with something better than that for a plan check at the building department. Is there any kind of geotechnical basis for the benefit of soil compaction under existing construction that has been in place that long with no problems? I'd be much happier to be able to reference something technical if anything exists. Any help would be greatly appreciated.