tngolfer
Structural
- Mar 3, 2008
- 95
I am designing an exterior wall of a water treatment plant. The plant floor will be higher than exterior grade (backfilled side is the interior). The liquid-supporting slab-on-grade floor slab will be placed roughly 18 ft. above exterior grade. The design will have to be a multi-step design:
1. Cantilever condition during construction and backfill
2. Restrained condition once the floor slab has set
The geotechnical report I'm reading recommends designing the cantilever wall for at-rest pressures. These are 60% higher than the active pressures I would usually use for a cantilever condition so my wall thickness, footing thickness, footing size, reinforcement, etc. are all much higher than expected. I want to get some other's input before contacting the geotechnical engineer. Do you agree with designing an 18 ft cantilever retaining wall for at-rest pressures? At that height I would expect the wall to tilt some creating an active condition.
1. Cantilever condition during construction and backfill
2. Restrained condition once the floor slab has set
The geotechnical report I'm reading recommends designing the cantilever wall for at-rest pressures. These are 60% higher than the active pressures I would usually use for a cantilever condition so my wall thickness, footing thickness, footing size, reinforcement, etc. are all much higher than expected. I want to get some other's input before contacting the geotechnical engineer. Do you agree with designing an 18 ft cantilever retaining wall for at-rest pressures? At that height I would expect the wall to tilt some creating an active condition.