moe333
Geotechnical
- Jul 31, 2003
- 416
Hi all,
I have a project where I will need to evaluate liquefaction potential and provide geotechnical pile capacity (driven or bored) at an elevation up to 40 feet below the elevation of the explorations (CPTU and Borings). The site will be excavated to this depth to construct 4 levels of underground parking. In addition, one portion of the building may not have underground parking. The soils are anticipated to be loose to medium dense silty to clayey sands, some relatively thin clay layers, with weak bedrock at a depth of about 80 feet.
I have not yet explored the site, but I am anticipating groundwater may be at about 30 feet so dewatering may be required. In addition, the site will likely be liquefiable.
I have the following questions:
I typically evaluate the liquefaction potential from the CPTU data using Robertson's method in accordance with the NCEER guidelines. I also evaluate it from the SPT data and fines content as a check. But I am at a loss as to how I would evaluate the liquefaction potential for site conditions that will be 30 to 40 feet below the exploration elevation? The CPT readings and SPT's are affected by the overburden, so once you remove the overburden, these values would change. However, near the edge of the excavation, the soil below the excavation bottom would probably feel some effect from the overburden
Similar for the geotechnical pile capacity, how would I evaluate the pile capacity for a condition where the site will be excavated 30 to 40 feet? I don't think I could simply subtract the capacity from the upper 30 to 40 feet since the soil capacity below this depth is partly due to the overburden above as well. An added complexity is that one portion of the building would not have a basement so the pile caps for this portion of the building would be 30 to 40 feet above the basement level.
I cannot find any references for this scenario for either liquefaction analysis or pile capcity design.
For a site where there is insignificant cut or fill below the exploration depth, I would typically evaluate the geotechnical pile capacity using the LCPC method.
Has anyone had experience with a similar scenario?
Thanks for any comments.
I have a project where I will need to evaluate liquefaction potential and provide geotechnical pile capacity (driven or bored) at an elevation up to 40 feet below the elevation of the explorations (CPTU and Borings). The site will be excavated to this depth to construct 4 levels of underground parking. In addition, one portion of the building may not have underground parking. The soils are anticipated to be loose to medium dense silty to clayey sands, some relatively thin clay layers, with weak bedrock at a depth of about 80 feet.
I have not yet explored the site, but I am anticipating groundwater may be at about 30 feet so dewatering may be required. In addition, the site will likely be liquefiable.
I have the following questions:
I typically evaluate the liquefaction potential from the CPTU data using Robertson's method in accordance with the NCEER guidelines. I also evaluate it from the SPT data and fines content as a check. But I am at a loss as to how I would evaluate the liquefaction potential for site conditions that will be 30 to 40 feet below the exploration elevation? The CPT readings and SPT's are affected by the overburden, so once you remove the overburden, these values would change. However, near the edge of the excavation, the soil below the excavation bottom would probably feel some effect from the overburden
Similar for the geotechnical pile capacity, how would I evaluate the pile capacity for a condition where the site will be excavated 30 to 40 feet? I don't think I could simply subtract the capacity from the upper 30 to 40 feet since the soil capacity below this depth is partly due to the overburden above as well. An added complexity is that one portion of the building would not have a basement so the pile caps for this portion of the building would be 30 to 40 feet above the basement level.
I cannot find any references for this scenario for either liquefaction analysis or pile capcity design.
For a site where there is insignificant cut or fill below the exploration depth, I would typically evaluate the geotechnical pile capacity using the LCPC method.
Has anyone had experience with a similar scenario?
Thanks for any comments.