JAX91
Structural
- Jul 26, 2007
- 45
My company is engineering some foundations for an industrial facility. The geotech report states the upper ten feet of existing grade is loose and gives an allowable bearing capacity of 1,500 psf. Our client hired a third party engineer to make foundation recommendations for the site. This third party engineer is not a geotech. He is just a third party. The third party engineer recommends excavating the entire 1.5 acre site to a depth of 3'-0" (frost depth). He then recommends placing a 6" thick, 1,500 psi mud slab reinforced with 6x6#10 welded wire fabric, and placing all foundations on top of it. He is claiming the mud slab will reduce settlement because it will "effectively spread out the loads by a factor of 3 to 5 compared to standard spread footings." Am I out of line thinking this idea will not work? Once the mud mat is relied upon to spread load, do you not have to then meet the minimum code requirements for a footing/mat foundation? ACI requires a minimum of 6" of concrete be placed above rebar for a foundation element. Coupled with the 3" clear cover required against earth, that means we would need at least 9" of thickness of concrete. Adding in the mesh thickness puts the required thickness closer to 10". Then we would need to provide minimum steel. In addition, does such a thin, weak mat on loose soils really even spread the load much further than the thickness of the mat? Also, would there not be access issues? I don't think you could get a pump truck to pump concrete out to the middle of the 1.5 acre site, which means you would need to drive a concrete truck out there. How do you get a concrete truck down into the pit? Can the weak mud mat handle the axle loads of a concrete truck? Some of these answers I can actual calculate, but others are opinion. I would appreciate anyone's thoughts on the subject.