msquared48
Structural
A friend has asked me to look into a horizontal mesh reinforced segmented concrete retaining wall - 11 to 12 feet max retention - that is has laterally spread at the top by 1 to 2" from the paving from excessive hydrostatic pressure due to a gap between the paving and top of the wall allowing water to filter down. There is a drainage channel at the top of the wall that is supposed to to catch the runoff from the sloping backfill and divert it elsewhere. The walls from this block system arte shown as 2X2X4' and detailed as a gravity wall system by the supplier's catalog, with no geogrid. There was a design by another engineer 10 years ago showing that the wall is OK for the original design loads that included 2 feet of surcharge for a sloping backfill and a geogrid layer at 2' vertical intervals. Now they want to add a HS truck road surcharge. Lots going on here...
My question and concern has to do with the geogrid reinforcing and the overload from the excessive hydrostatic pressure - the geogrid has obviously stretched and my concern is that it may be close to failure, if not at least locally failed, at the upper levels. How much can this material be stretched before failure? The length of the embedded geogrid layers is 15 feet according to the reports furnished. I am unfamiliar with the different types (patterns, thicknesses, grades, etc.) of geogrid material, so any enlightenment to ask further questions will be appreciated.
Controlling the hydrostatic pressure is a must, but the wall will never return to the original geometry. I am of the opinion to excavate the top portion of the backfill and examine the condition of the geogrid. If it is OK, then reconstruct the excavated section and proceed. Otherwise, remove and replace with a new wall. Seems like this scenario is like a soil nailed wall where the wall has to deflect in order to load the geogrid and gain lateral stability.
Mike McCann, PE, SE (WA)
My question and concern has to do with the geogrid reinforcing and the overload from the excessive hydrostatic pressure - the geogrid has obviously stretched and my concern is that it may be close to failure, if not at least locally failed, at the upper levels. How much can this material be stretched before failure? The length of the embedded geogrid layers is 15 feet according to the reports furnished. I am unfamiliar with the different types (patterns, thicknesses, grades, etc.) of geogrid material, so any enlightenment to ask further questions will be appreciated.
Controlling the hydrostatic pressure is a must, but the wall will never return to the original geometry. I am of the opinion to excavate the top portion of the backfill and examine the condition of the geogrid. If it is OK, then reconstruct the excavated section and proceed. Otherwise, remove and replace with a new wall. Seems like this scenario is like a soil nailed wall where the wall has to deflect in order to load the geogrid and gain lateral stability.
Mike McCann, PE, SE (WA)