Okiryu
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 13, 2013
- 1,094
Hi, I would like to ask for your opinions for the below situation:
I have a new project for a building addition. The existing building is a 1-story office building and it was constructed 55 years ago and it has 1.7m x 1.7m shallow square footings where Df is at GL-1.5m. Those footings were designed for an allowable bearing pressure of 4,500 psf (200 KPa) based on a bearing layer of silty sandy gravel soils.
Based on our soil borings we confirmed the silty sandy gravel soils, however, we found that at GL-1.5 the gravel soils were loose (SPT N-value 4) or were replaced by cohesive fill soils. It may appear that this could happen due to past construction activities. Now, we found the competent gravel layer to be at an approximately depth of GL-2.0m~3.0m.
We are in the process to provide our recommendations to the structural and at those depths (GL-2.0m~3.0m) we might be able to validate/recommend the previous 4,500 psf for allowable bearing pressure.
Of course, for the new foundation for the additions adjacent to the existing building, the concern is if we excavate deeper than GL-1.5m we will be removing support to the existing footings. The preliminary structural plans for the new additions call for a bearing wall on a continuous footing adjacent to the existing wall, so in order to avoid excavation we are planning to recommend soil improvements using soil cement columns (I am in Japan and in my area soil cement improvements are common)or helical steel piles to a depth of GL-3.0m to support the new continuous footing. The structural is also concerned if we excavate for the new foundations we will undermine the existing slab-on-grade.
Do you think that there are other options? I made a sketch so you can visualize better the situation.
Thanks for your help.
I have a new project for a building addition. The existing building is a 1-story office building and it was constructed 55 years ago and it has 1.7m x 1.7m shallow square footings where Df is at GL-1.5m. Those footings were designed for an allowable bearing pressure of 4,500 psf (200 KPa) based on a bearing layer of silty sandy gravel soils.
Based on our soil borings we confirmed the silty sandy gravel soils, however, we found that at GL-1.5 the gravel soils were loose (SPT N-value 4) or were replaced by cohesive fill soils. It may appear that this could happen due to past construction activities. Now, we found the competent gravel layer to be at an approximately depth of GL-2.0m~3.0m.
We are in the process to provide our recommendations to the structural and at those depths (GL-2.0m~3.0m) we might be able to validate/recommend the previous 4,500 psf for allowable bearing pressure.
Of course, for the new foundation for the additions adjacent to the existing building, the concern is if we excavate deeper than GL-1.5m we will be removing support to the existing footings. The preliminary structural plans for the new additions call for a bearing wall on a continuous footing adjacent to the existing wall, so in order to avoid excavation we are planning to recommend soil improvements using soil cement columns (I am in Japan and in my area soil cement improvements are common)or helical steel piles to a depth of GL-3.0m to support the new continuous footing. The structural is also concerned if we excavate for the new foundations we will undermine the existing slab-on-grade.
Do you think that there are other options? I made a sketch so you can visualize better the situation.
Thanks for your help.