redun
Structural
- Apr 5, 2011
- 15
Looking for opinions on soil cover for toe of reinforced concrete cantilever retaining wall. Some will put bottom of footing at local frost depth which is about 3 ft for my area.
For wall say over 3' high,the heel of the footing has plenty of soil cover. For higher walls there of course is alot of soil above the footing from the wall stem back.
I am wondering if the relatively small toe of the wall really needs to be that deep. I would use at least a ft of cover over the top of the footing toe and if the footing was say 10" thick,then I'd have 1'-10" instead of 3' cover.
Has there been any studies on how frost acts on retaining walls?
Given the relatively deep soil right behind the wall, wouldn'that
mitigate the formation of frost lenses to some degree directly under the footing toe?
For wall say over 3' high,the heel of the footing has plenty of soil cover. For higher walls there of course is alot of soil above the footing from the wall stem back.
I am wondering if the relatively small toe of the wall really needs to be that deep. I would use at least a ft of cover over the top of the footing toe and if the footing was say 10" thick,then I'd have 1'-10" instead of 3' cover.
Has there been any studies on how frost acts on retaining walls?
Given the relatively deep soil right behind the wall, wouldn'that
mitigate the formation of frost lenses to some degree directly under the footing toe?