EireChch
Geotechnical
- Jul 25, 2012
- 1,343
Hi,as part of a larger development I am working on a bin store that comprises of a steel posts supporting a aluminium sheet roof with a poured concrete floor. Plan view of 4m * 7m. The ground conditions are made ground (non-engineered fill - gravelly silty clay with brick fragments - undrained shear strength typically 40-60kPa, SPT-N 34 and 27 at two different boreholes) to 2m depth, beneath that London clay (undrained shear strength 50-70kPA typically, SPT-N 13 and 11 at two different boreholes) is encountered to great depth.
The geotechs recommend that foundations should be conventional trench fill mass concrete spread foundations in London Clay with a net allowable bearing pressure of 80kPa. Given that made ground would extend to 2m depth this would involve excavation to 2.65 (made ground depth plus 0.15m embedment into london clay as recommended by geotech). This would then be filled with concrete with the posts bolted to concrete slab.
The contractor is looking to place concrete slab on 600mm of compacted aggregate from surface level. In someways I would think this is acceptable given that it is only a bin store however given that it is made ground there could be differential settlement of the concrete slab, however thinking about it again surely 600mm of compacted aggregate and say a 100mm thick reinforced slab would be capable of accommodating differential settlement so why worry. My boss is adamant that the they should excavate down to made ground and pour mass concrete strip footings. I believe that this involves a lot of excavation and concrete.
Would an alternative idea be to pile the down to 2.5m depth around the perimeter and construct a self supporting ring beam and pour a self supporting slab or run with the contractors idea or go with what my boss says!!
Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Regards
The geotechs recommend that foundations should be conventional trench fill mass concrete spread foundations in London Clay with a net allowable bearing pressure of 80kPa. Given that made ground would extend to 2m depth this would involve excavation to 2.65 (made ground depth plus 0.15m embedment into london clay as recommended by geotech). This would then be filled with concrete with the posts bolted to concrete slab.
The contractor is looking to place concrete slab on 600mm of compacted aggregate from surface level. In someways I would think this is acceptable given that it is only a bin store however given that it is made ground there could be differential settlement of the concrete slab, however thinking about it again surely 600mm of compacted aggregate and say a 100mm thick reinforced slab would be capable of accommodating differential settlement so why worry. My boss is adamant that the they should excavate down to made ground and pour mass concrete strip footings. I believe that this involves a lot of excavation and concrete.
Would an alternative idea be to pile the down to 2.5m depth around the perimeter and construct a self supporting ring beam and pour a self supporting slab or run with the contractors idea or go with what my boss says!!
Any thoughts greatly appreciated.
Regards