Redacted
Structural
- Mar 12, 2016
- 160
Hi all,
Just a bit of background and sorry for the long post :
There is an existing retaining wall that was built quite a long time ago that retains a road and the earth underneath it. The wall is made up of huge blocks of limestone about 1'x1'x2' deep blocks. See the attached image. There was some concern that was raised regarding the wall bulging out. Behind the bulge, there is about a 1m deep cavity, with the plan of filling this with concrete to ensure the road surface doesn't dip. This concrete fill will require the wall to be braced when placed.
I think that a few things are happening to cause the wall to bulge. The first being a tree root behind the wall is dislodging the stones and the second being that I think the wall is getting undermined by erosion, which is causing it to drop slightly. The wall is on coastal beach sand and doesn't look to be on a footing. We have had a surveyor down there and it was found that the wall bulged about 5mm in a month.
As a solution, I was going to design and construct a new reinforced concrete cantilever or gravity retaining wall with a shallow foundation and anchor the foundation into the adjacent rock formations.
Although if you can think of a more practical solution, please do share.
For the retaining wall design, I started to determine the horizontal forces but my boss mentioned that I am being too conservative? Essentially my assumptions are attached but I am assuming that the existing wall has failed and therefore this new wall needs to retain that wall and the road/earth behind it. I was assuming fully saturated soil and water pressure starting from the road surface because I didn't want to depend on a drainage system, which might get clogged. Not sure if this water pressure assumption is practical though. Would love to hear opinions and advice on this.
Just a bit of background and sorry for the long post :
There is an existing retaining wall that was built quite a long time ago that retains a road and the earth underneath it. The wall is made up of huge blocks of limestone about 1'x1'x2' deep blocks. See the attached image. There was some concern that was raised regarding the wall bulging out. Behind the bulge, there is about a 1m deep cavity, with the plan of filling this with concrete to ensure the road surface doesn't dip. This concrete fill will require the wall to be braced when placed.
I think that a few things are happening to cause the wall to bulge. The first being a tree root behind the wall is dislodging the stones and the second being that I think the wall is getting undermined by erosion, which is causing it to drop slightly. The wall is on coastal beach sand and doesn't look to be on a footing. We have had a surveyor down there and it was found that the wall bulged about 5mm in a month.
As a solution, I was going to design and construct a new reinforced concrete cantilever or gravity retaining wall with a shallow foundation and anchor the foundation into the adjacent rock formations.
Although if you can think of a more practical solution, please do share.
For the retaining wall design, I started to determine the horizontal forces but my boss mentioned that I am being too conservative? Essentially my assumptions are attached but I am assuming that the existing wall has failed and therefore this new wall needs to retain that wall and the road/earth behind it. I was assuming fully saturated soil and water pressure starting from the road surface because I didn't want to depend on a drainage system, which might get clogged. Not sure if this water pressure assumption is practical though. Would love to hear opinions and advice on this.