PaulMarkham
Civil/Environmental
- Dec 19, 2003
- 4
I am a general civil engineer working for a construction company.
We often use mobile cranes on the sites and my task is to design suitable foundations for the outriggers of the cranes.
Often the ground is layered with for example 2m of firm clay over soft clay. To improve the trafficability and bearing capacity we place say 300mm of compacted stone over the firm clay.
We assume a simple 45 degree spread of the load into the ground and check the bearing pressure on each layer.
I have searched the foundation engineering text books but they do not deal with this sort of situation.
Is this a valid approach?
Is there a recognised way of deaing with layered ground?
We often use mobile cranes on the sites and my task is to design suitable foundations for the outriggers of the cranes.
Often the ground is layered with for example 2m of firm clay over soft clay. To improve the trafficability and bearing capacity we place say 300mm of compacted stone over the firm clay.
We assume a simple 45 degree spread of the load into the ground and check the bearing pressure on each layer.
I have searched the foundation engineering text books but they do not deal with this sort of situation.
Is this a valid approach?
Is there a recognised way of deaing with layered ground?