gte447f
Structural
- Dec 1, 2008
- 805
I am assessing a situation for a residential homeowner who has discovered that a wood post supporting part of an exterior deck is located on top of a septic tank. The tank is buried approximately 2 feet below grade. The post is an 8x8 timber post approximately 15-20 feet tall with a tributary area of approximately 40 square feet of deck floor and 40 square feet of roof. My initial inclination is to recommend that the tank should be abandoned and replaced, since the tank was not designed to support the loads from the deck structure. A new tank would be installed a short distance away and most likely connected to the existing leach field. The existing tank would be abandoned and backfilled with concrete. Does this course of action sound reasonable? Does backfilling the existing tank with concrete create any new design conditions that need to be considered that I am not thinking about? The only issue I have considered is the possibility of future settlement of the tank due to the increased weight of the tank when filled with concrete. If that happens, my view is that as long as the amount of future settlement is relatively small (ballpark 1" or less), then the wood deck construction should be flexible enough that minor settlement of the tank below the deck post should not create any serious problems.
Alternatively, I am interested in how the current loads on the tank (i.e. soil overburden and concentrated load from deck post) compare to the typical design loads for a residential septic tank. I have a copy of ASTM C1227-20 "Standard Specification for Precast Concrete Septic Tanks", but I am having trouble interpreting the minimum design loads stated in Section 6.1 of the document (excerpt attached). Section 6.1.5 mentions a minimum live load of 100 psf or a concentrated load of 2250 lbs, but then Section 6.1.6 mentions a minimum live load of 300 psf. Why the difference? What am I missing?
Regardless, I am convinced that the existing loading could exceed the minimum loads stated in ASTM C1227, and furthermore, I have no way of knowing whether the existing tank even meets the ASTM standard. Hence, why I am leaning toward recommending replacing the tank and backfilling the abandoned tank.
Thoughts?
Alternatively, I am interested in how the current loads on the tank (i.e. soil overburden and concentrated load from deck post) compare to the typical design loads for a residential septic tank. I have a copy of ASTM C1227-20 "Standard Specification for Precast Concrete Septic Tanks", but I am having trouble interpreting the minimum design loads stated in Section 6.1 of the document (excerpt attached). Section 6.1.5 mentions a minimum live load of 100 psf or a concentrated load of 2250 lbs, but then Section 6.1.6 mentions a minimum live load of 300 psf. Why the difference? What am I missing?
Regardless, I am convinced that the existing loading could exceed the minimum loads stated in ASTM C1227, and furthermore, I have no way of knowing whether the existing tank even meets the ASTM standard. Hence, why I am leaning toward recommending replacing the tank and backfilling the abandoned tank.
Thoughts?