Both [blue]
PEinc[/blue]'s and [blue]
BigH[/blue]'s comments answered your original question. The reduction addresses the risk of partial loss of passive pressure - or misjudging the passive pressure available - by applying a separate (partial) factor of safety to that soil factor.
Regarding the following comment:
koodi said:
I disagree. Providing "soil property" values that already contain the stability factors leads to confusion. It is quite possible that an inexperienced designer becoming accustomed to this practice may assume the stability factors are included when they're not. Thus, it is a very unintelligent practice.
I guess it's a function of perspective. There are two approaches to this issue: provide the soil parameter to the structural (or general civil) engineer as an ultimate value, and expect him to apply an appropriate factor of safety to the soil parameter as a part of the overall design. The downside to this approach is that if s/he chooses too low a value - or fails to factor it at all - then the structure could suffer a catastrophic failure. And someone could die.
If, on the other hand, the geotechnical engineer provides an allowable value and the structural/civil engineer doesn't factor it - nothing bad happens. If the structural/civil engineer factors it inadvertently, the design is too conservative. But this is usually caught because of the higher-than-expected construction cost. Regardless of what happens, there is no risk of danger to the public.
Providing allowable soil values has a very practical basis. It is rooted in a desire to protect the public health, safety and welfare. Every seasoned geotechnical engineer that I know provides allowable values, and I have heard only a handful of complaints about the practice over the 22+ years of my professional career. The complaints usually occur when the structural engineer wants to use unfactored values with USD/LRFD design methods.
The real answer to your concern over allowable vs ultimate values is simple:
communication. It's the very kind of problem you have described that ASFE has been working to prevent for almost 30 years. Remember that the geotechnical engineer should be a valued part of the design team. After all, your design literally rests on his work -
Please see FAQ731-376 for great suggestions on how to make the best use of Eng-Tips Fora. See faq158-922 for recommendations regarding the question, "How Do You Evaluate Fill Settlement Beneath Structures?"