usaedy
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 17, 2005
- 9
I am looking to determine whether the stadard practice of not compacting backfill material around the foundation perimeter is a good practice when building in geologic areas containing Karst features. I am specifically conerned with water penetration and the possibility of sinkhole formation.
Does anyone compact their foundation backfills in any way, whether by tamping with the backhoe bucket, or using a jumping jack or other tamping device? Of course I am talking about a 2' wide space between the foundation wall and the limit of excavation and at 8' deep, it is usually not practical or safe for a person to use a walk behind compaction device.
I am looking into this practice because I have just had a situation where the perimeter grading around a foundation settled and was backsloped toward the foundation
wall. A sinkhole opened up in the front yard of the lot away from the foundation and I suspect these were related issues.
Any advice would be helpful. Hopefully this will be a good discussion.
Does anyone compact their foundation backfills in any way, whether by tamping with the backhoe bucket, or using a jumping jack or other tamping device? Of course I am talking about a 2' wide space between the foundation wall and the limit of excavation and at 8' deep, it is usually not practical or safe for a person to use a walk behind compaction device.
I am looking into this practice because I have just had a situation where the perimeter grading around a foundation settled and was backsloped toward the foundation
wall. A sinkhole opened up in the front yard of the lot away from the foundation and I suspect these were related issues.
Any advice would be helpful. Hopefully this will be a good discussion.