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Structural
- Feb 15, 2005
- 3
I am in the process of designing a Insulated Concrete Form house that will be built on Galveston Island Texas. The house has a ground floor/garage, a 1st floor and a 2nd floor. Total weight with concrete floors and walls is around 1.5 million pounds over a footprint of around 2,000 ft^2. The soil profile is a SM from ground surface to a depth of 15ft below ground surface with blow counts from 12 to 25, from 15ft to 24ft below ground surface is a SM with shell, blow counts from 5 to 10, and from 24ft to 30 ft below ground surface is a CH with 1tsf pocket pen at 24ft and 4tsf at 28 ft below ground surface.
The foundation will be slab on grade with wide and deep perimeter and interior beams or a “mat” foundation. I am not worried about a bearing failure of the sand, my concern is settlement of the loose sand/shell layer. The houses that will be built adjacent (to the left and right, possibility within 10ft) will be on piling that will be driven 10 to 15 ft below grade. I am concerned that the vibrations from the pile driving will cause settlement after the structure built.
I have looked into calculating the potential settlements but I honestly don’t have much confidence in the numbers I would get given what I see as the uniqueness of this situation.
The lot required about 1000 cubic yards of fill to level up the back yard, so the fill was delivered and stockpiled on the house foundation area to provide a surcharge. This was done in December.
So my questions are..... what do the experts on this site think about this, anyone with similar past experience? Should I drive some pilings while the surcharge is in place in order to vibrate the sand while it is loaded with something other than the house? Was surcharging the foundation a waste of time? Should I just install sub pilings to carry the load (25ft 12 in diameter pile capacity is 4.2 tons, over 350 piles assuming no foundation support other than the piles)?
Thanks for your thoughts,
Scott
The foundation will be slab on grade with wide and deep perimeter and interior beams or a “mat” foundation. I am not worried about a bearing failure of the sand, my concern is settlement of the loose sand/shell layer. The houses that will be built adjacent (to the left and right, possibility within 10ft) will be on piling that will be driven 10 to 15 ft below grade. I am concerned that the vibrations from the pile driving will cause settlement after the structure built.
I have looked into calculating the potential settlements but I honestly don’t have much confidence in the numbers I would get given what I see as the uniqueness of this situation.
The lot required about 1000 cubic yards of fill to level up the back yard, so the fill was delivered and stockpiled on the house foundation area to provide a surcharge. This was done in December.
So my questions are..... what do the experts on this site think about this, anyone with similar past experience? Should I drive some pilings while the surcharge is in place in order to vibrate the sand while it is loaded with something other than the house? Was surcharging the foundation a waste of time? Should I just install sub pilings to carry the load (25ft 12 in diameter pile capacity is 4.2 tons, over 350 piles assuming no foundation support other than the piles)?
Thanks for your thoughts,
Scott