bones206
Structural
- Jun 22, 2007
- 1,998
I’m one of the structural engineers for a project in California, where piles are needed to anchor a concrete “protective structure” subject to large, somewhat dynamic lateral loads on the order of hundreds of kips due to mudslide. I have a soil boring that shows bouldery, gravelly silt conditions, but I’ve been told by the folk who bid the job that there will be no budget for a geotechnical consultant. I have 2 weeks to come up with a design, and I have limited experience with pile supported structures.
Since this is an extremely affluent, densely populated area, I suspect that the noise and vibration of driven piles could open a political can of worms, and I’m sure the bouldery soil would preclude them anyways.
Can anyone recommend a type of pile with high lateral resistance, constructible in these soil conditions, and without high levels of noise and vibration that the local residents will tolerate?
Since this is an extremely affluent, densely populated area, I suspect that the noise and vibration of driven piles could open a political can of worms, and I’m sure the bouldery soil would preclude them anyways.
Can anyone recommend a type of pile with high lateral resistance, constructible in these soil conditions, and without high levels of noise and vibration that the local residents will tolerate?