LUGuy
Structural
- Dec 17, 2003
- 34
Are there any means to quantify the effects of vibration on an SOE system?
A contractor installed an SOE wall approximately 10ft deep less than 2ft from an existing masonry building on a spread footing. The SOE wall was made from drilling 8" pipes into the ground and sliding steel plates behind them while excavating. The adjacent building was relatively stable until they started driving piles 60-80 ft away. At that time, the foundation dropped at least 1" and moved away from the building 1/2" or so, all during two days of pile driving.
There is no question that the SOE failed and that the building foundation has failed. I am wondering if there could have been any way to figure on the effects of pile driving so close by. All visible excavated ground is sand.
I can't imagine that this system was in fact engineered. If it was, the engineer has also failed. Are there any code/OSHA/typical requirements to engineer SOE systems over a certain depth?
Miscmetals
A contractor installed an SOE wall approximately 10ft deep less than 2ft from an existing masonry building on a spread footing. The SOE wall was made from drilling 8" pipes into the ground and sliding steel plates behind them while excavating. The adjacent building was relatively stable until they started driving piles 60-80 ft away. At that time, the foundation dropped at least 1" and moved away from the building 1/2" or so, all during two days of pile driving.
There is no question that the SOE failed and that the building foundation has failed. I am wondering if there could have been any way to figure on the effects of pile driving so close by. All visible excavated ground is sand.
I can't imagine that this system was in fact engineered. If it was, the engineer has also failed. Are there any code/OSHA/typical requirements to engineer SOE systems over a certain depth?
Miscmetals