trainguy
Structural
- Apr 26, 2002
- 706
Guys,
I am involved in a free standing structure, essentially an upside down L whose base must resist low vertical loads, horizontal load and moment. The team is heavily vested in mounting each of these onto a single caisson pile (drilled pier, filled with concrete), to an appropriate depth.
In a uniform cohesionless soil, the minimum calculated depth (controlled by deflection) is approx. 9m. (This is about equal to the structure's height above ground). However, the site has bedrock at around a 6m depth.
Is it common practice to neglect the soil in such a case, and design as a cantilever anchored into the bedrock, or are there more refined methods? (FEA with soil "springs" and a fixed base, etc.)
tg
I am involved in a free standing structure, essentially an upside down L whose base must resist low vertical loads, horizontal load and moment. The team is heavily vested in mounting each of these onto a single caisson pile (drilled pier, filled with concrete), to an appropriate depth.
In a uniform cohesionless soil, the minimum calculated depth (controlled by deflection) is approx. 9m. (This is about equal to the structure's height above ground). However, the site has bedrock at around a 6m depth.
Is it common practice to neglect the soil in such a case, and design as a cantilever anchored into the bedrock, or are there more refined methods? (FEA with soil "springs" and a fixed base, etc.)
tg