Braced excavations typically are for short-term loading conditions - i.e., just to facilitate construction. If you are dewatering for construction, then I'm not sure how the water table factors into this analysis.
The T&P equations for braced excavations are different for cohesive and granular soils. You have both. However, in both cases the area of the load v. depth (integral with depth) is 30 percent greater than the integral of the Rankine active earth pressure. If this were my responsibility, I'd determine the Rankine force for the upper layer, multiply it by 1.3 and then form the rectangle. I'd do the same thing for the lower soil.
Actually, as a design engineer, I'd leave the whole mess to the contractor, 'cause it's the contractor that owns temporary shoring. (That is unless you are working for the contractor. . .)
f-d
¡papá gordo ain’t no madre flaca!