KootK
Structural
- Oct 16, 2001
- 18,590
At my old company in the US, our policy was to basically use the CRSI manual for retaining wall design whenever possible. As far as I know, the tabulated designs in the CRSI manual do not include provisions for compaction loads.
At my new company in Canada, EVERY soils report that comes in says that retaining walls should be designed for compaction loads. They're serious loads too (12 KPa lateral etc.). It resutls in beefy retaining walls.
This issue has me confused. I've been treating compaction loads as if they are permanent. i.e. I design the wall for soil pressure, surcharge loads, AND compaction loads concurrently (and other stuff too as required).
Is this approach correct? Or can compaction loads be treated as temporary construction loads that should NOT be applied concurrently with live loads?
I guess the over arching question is: are compaction loads permanent?
Thanks,
KK
At my new company in Canada, EVERY soils report that comes in says that retaining walls should be designed for compaction loads. They're serious loads too (12 KPa lateral etc.). It resutls in beefy retaining walls.
This issue has me confused. I've been treating compaction loads as if they are permanent. i.e. I design the wall for soil pressure, surcharge loads, AND compaction loads concurrently (and other stuff too as required).
Is this approach correct? Or can compaction loads be treated as temporary construction loads that should NOT be applied concurrently with live loads?
I guess the over arching question is: are compaction loads permanent?
Thanks,
KK