dirtgirlhawaii
Geotechnical
- Nov 10, 2011
- 8
I have a 5.0' retaining wall holding a pool shell. There is 4 feet of water inside the pool. I'm trying to evaluate an acceptable distance from the pool that a trench can be placed to replace a water line. I can easily evaluate the wall with the hydrostatic pressures vs. the lateral pressures, etc. for overturning, sliding, and bearing capacity.
However, lateral earth pressure theory for cantilevered walls has the lateral earth pressures on a vertical plane starting from the toe of the wall. I'm not seeing how the distance of the trench plays any role in the stability of the wall.
The trench will probably be only 2.5' to 3.0' feet below the pool deck. Can someone send me in the right direction? It makes sense if I evaluate the wall with an active or passive wedge of 45 - 45+phi/2. However if I'm evaluating at rest pressures, I need a total distance of 5.0 feet from the toe of the wall. I'm about six inches short of that based on current plans - how do I reduce the at rest earth pressures?
However, lateral earth pressure theory for cantilevered walls has the lateral earth pressures on a vertical plane starting from the toe of the wall. I'm not seeing how the distance of the trench plays any role in the stability of the wall.
The trench will probably be only 2.5' to 3.0' feet below the pool deck. Can someone send me in the right direction? It makes sense if I evaluate the wall with an active or passive wedge of 45 - 45+phi/2. However if I'm evaluating at rest pressures, I need a total distance of 5.0 feet from the toe of the wall. I'm about six inches short of that based on current plans - how do I reduce the at rest earth pressures?