jmmoncada
Structural
- Jan 5, 2021
- 6
Hi,
I am currently working on foundation design project for a Transmission line (500kV) and the owner is proposing to construct a new concrete drilled shaft (6' in diameter) about 10ft away center-to-center from an abandoned shaft (6'in diameter). The shafts will not be connected by with a concrete cap. The abandoned shaft was fully installed (i.e. rebar cage, anchor bolts and concrete were installed). However, due to the project tolerance requirements the owner wants to abandoned the foundation completely and relocate it. My initial thoughts are that placing the new foundation 10ft from the abandoned would not hinder its capacity (uplift/compression & lateral) since the abandoned shaft will not be loaded and any grouping effects will not apply in this case. Also, I think that the abandoned shaft would act as a soil strengthening mechanism and provide additional capacity for the new foundation. I would like to know if anyone has input on this or if any one has experience with a similar situation.
Thank you
I am currently working on foundation design project for a Transmission line (500kV) and the owner is proposing to construct a new concrete drilled shaft (6' in diameter) about 10ft away center-to-center from an abandoned shaft (6'in diameter). The shafts will not be connected by with a concrete cap. The abandoned shaft was fully installed (i.e. rebar cage, anchor bolts and concrete were installed). However, due to the project tolerance requirements the owner wants to abandoned the foundation completely and relocate it. My initial thoughts are that placing the new foundation 10ft from the abandoned would not hinder its capacity (uplift/compression & lateral) since the abandoned shaft will not be loaded and any grouping effects will not apply in this case. Also, I think that the abandoned shaft would act as a soil strengthening mechanism and provide additional capacity for the new foundation. I would like to know if anyone has input on this or if any one has experience with a similar situation.
Thank you