If the excavation support wall is a temporary system, the basement walls must be designed for the full earth and surcharge pressures. For permanent tiedback walls, the basement is usually constructed up against the tiedback wall, with no backfill between the basement foundation wall and the sheeting. Permanent tiedback soldier beam walls usually have epoxy-coated soldier beams, corrosion protected tieback anchors, some type of wall drainage (such as Miradrain panels), and a premanent facing of cast-in-place or precast concrete. It is also preferable that the building not be rigidly connected to the tiedback wall due to differences in their stiffness. With permanent tiedback walls for a building, the tieback anchors are usually installed without wales that might project into the proposed basement area. Instead of using wales, the tieback anchors are installed between paired channels or wide flange beams so that wales are not needed and so that a permanent facing can be easily attached to the soldier beam wall.
It is a frequent mistake (incorrect assumption?) made by architects and structural engineers to think that because underpinning or temporary sheeting is needed to construct a building, the new building foundation wall doesn't need to be designed for the lateral pressures.