jtstruct
Structural
- Jun 20, 2003
- 21
Thanks in advance for your time.
I'm involved with a project where the designers plan to excavate in a crawl space to create a basement for a mechanical room. The designers have drawn a 45 degree line from the edge of the existing footings into the crawl space area. Their argument is that everything is a-okay (meaning no need to do anything special to the existing footings and no need to hire a geotech) as long as they don't excavate past this 45 degree line. I'm not sure where they came up with this 45 degree line (i.e. why not 30 degrees?). It seems that this imaginary work line would be completely dependent on the properties of the soil. I say we need to hire a geotech. Do you all know if this is common practice for excavations adjacent to existing footings?
FYI, this is a very old, 3-story building with stone footings.
I'm involved with a project where the designers plan to excavate in a crawl space to create a basement for a mechanical room. The designers have drawn a 45 degree line from the edge of the existing footings into the crawl space area. Their argument is that everything is a-okay (meaning no need to do anything special to the existing footings and no need to hire a geotech) as long as they don't excavate past this 45 degree line. I'm not sure where they came up with this 45 degree line (i.e. why not 30 degrees?). It seems that this imaginary work line would be completely dependent on the properties of the soil. I say we need to hire a geotech. Do you all know if this is common practice for excavations adjacent to existing footings?
FYI, this is a very old, 3-story building with stone footings.