MDavidsonPE
Structural
- Aug 4, 2015
- 4
I'm looking for other engineers input here on doweling into bedrock for continuous strip footings. The project is located on a significantly sloping site. Overall 20 ft drop over 100 ft length. The bedrock surface varies from 0 ft to 4 ft below the existing sloping ground surface. Loads along the proposed continuous 4 ft high foundation walls are in the order of 4 klf, with multiple point loads of 10 to 25 kips every 5 to 10 ft along their length.
I designed the footings to bear directly on bedrock, and required that the bedrock be leveled to no steeper than 6H:1V both longitud. and transverse to the footing with steps as required to achieve that. {Note that IRC requires 10H:1V max, and it doesn't mention soil or rock.] I used #5 dowels embedded 18 in. into a 1" dia. grouted filled hole the rock. The 18" depth was because since the top 6 in. of the rock surface was weathered at many places. Dowel spacing was 18" o.c., staggered along the length of wall, with a 2 ft wide footing. I thought is was completely reasonable-- but alas...
The architect came back to me saying that all the local contractors who bid the job complained bitterly that my design requirements were over-the-top-excessive and that the design was driving the foundation cost way up. [to over 200K]. They typically only go 6" into the rock with pins every 4 ft or so in similar situations. The architect sympathized with them since he is also the developer and would be paying the bill. I promised to take a second look at it.
Question 1: If you are designing footings on sloping rock with dowels, what is the maximum slope that you will accept. i.e. ?H:1V
Question 2: Assuming you analyze sliding of the footing as an inclined block, and you do it without shear friction dowels, do you include full dead load or 0.60D. Under allowable load design, using 0.6D, would you still have a FS against sliding of 1.5, or is that overkill.
Question 3: What coefficient of friction do you use for the concrete on variably fractured weathered granite bedrock? [I used 0.60 but considered pushing it to 0.75.]
Question 4: If you conclude that you need dowels to create the clamping force perpendicular to the rock surface to give you the shear friction that you need to resist sliding, do you also include the dead load in the calculation, or do you conservatively ignore it, and just use the dowel contribution.
Lots of questions. I'm very interested to hear what others do in this situation. Thanks.
I designed the footings to bear directly on bedrock, and required that the bedrock be leveled to no steeper than 6H:1V both longitud. and transverse to the footing with steps as required to achieve that. {Note that IRC requires 10H:1V max, and it doesn't mention soil or rock.] I used #5 dowels embedded 18 in. into a 1" dia. grouted filled hole the rock. The 18" depth was because since the top 6 in. of the rock surface was weathered at many places. Dowel spacing was 18" o.c., staggered along the length of wall, with a 2 ft wide footing. I thought is was completely reasonable-- but alas...
The architect came back to me saying that all the local contractors who bid the job complained bitterly that my design requirements were over-the-top-excessive and that the design was driving the foundation cost way up. [to over 200K]. They typically only go 6" into the rock with pins every 4 ft or so in similar situations. The architect sympathized with them since he is also the developer and would be paying the bill. I promised to take a second look at it.
Question 1: If you are designing footings on sloping rock with dowels, what is the maximum slope that you will accept. i.e. ?H:1V
Question 2: Assuming you analyze sliding of the footing as an inclined block, and you do it without shear friction dowels, do you include full dead load or 0.60D. Under allowable load design, using 0.6D, would you still have a FS against sliding of 1.5, or is that overkill.
Question 3: What coefficient of friction do you use for the concrete on variably fractured weathered granite bedrock? [I used 0.60 but considered pushing it to 0.75.]
Question 4: If you conclude that you need dowels to create the clamping force perpendicular to the rock surface to give you the shear friction that you need to resist sliding, do you also include the dead load in the calculation, or do you conservatively ignore it, and just use the dowel contribution.
Lots of questions. I'm very interested to hear what others do in this situation. Thanks.