Madziwa
Geotechnical
- Aug 5, 2003
- 12
Does anyone know of any work in connection with wind causing vibration that led to piles settling through loose to medium dense silty sands?
We have just withstood a storm that has led to some settlement damage on a house on a very exposed coast. The house was designed in accordance with the local code for wind sped, but the actual wind was about 1.5 times as great. This seems to have led to settlement of a braced pile.
Its almost a case of dry liquefaction caused by the sides of a house vibrating causing the piles to vibrate and this leading to settlement of the sand around the pile. The diagonal brace is connected to the pile that has settled, almost at ground level and we are considering if the wind action has been enough to use the brace almost as a jack-hammer to push the pile down.
Gareth Williams
Geotechnical Engineer,
Auckland New Zealand
We have just withstood a storm that has led to some settlement damage on a house on a very exposed coast. The house was designed in accordance with the local code for wind sped, but the actual wind was about 1.5 times as great. This seems to have led to settlement of a braced pile.
Its almost a case of dry liquefaction caused by the sides of a house vibrating causing the piles to vibrate and this leading to settlement of the sand around the pile. The diagonal brace is connected to the pile that has settled, almost at ground level and we are considering if the wind action has been enough to use the brace almost as a jack-hammer to push the pile down.
Gareth Williams
Geotechnical Engineer,
Auckland New Zealand