moe333
Geotechnical
- Jul 31, 2003
- 416
I'm trying to come up with some options to support an excavation in an urban environment. A 1960s building with a basement is to be demolished including the basement walls and slab, and the footprint of the building is to be backfilled up to street grade.
The basement walls support sidewalks/city streets on two sides with various underground utilities, locations unknown at this point. The basement walls are within about 6 feet of a historic building built in the 1930s. The assumption is the 1930s building does not have a basement.
Soil conditions are not yet known but groundwater will probably not be an issue. My first thought was to underpin the adjacent building, and install tiebacks through cutouts in the basement wall, then excavate, shoot shotcrete, and tension the tiebacks sequentially by cutting horizontal panels out of the basement wall. After the excavation reaches the basement slab, backfill could begin.
This seems like a lot of work and very expensive so I am looking for other options. It would be a lot easier if the basement walls and slab could be left in place, but they can't.
Appreciate any suggestions.
The basement walls support sidewalks/city streets on two sides with various underground utilities, locations unknown at this point. The basement walls are within about 6 feet of a historic building built in the 1930s. The assumption is the 1930s building does not have a basement.
Soil conditions are not yet known but groundwater will probably not be an issue. My first thought was to underpin the adjacent building, and install tiebacks through cutouts in the basement wall, then excavate, shoot shotcrete, and tension the tiebacks sequentially by cutting horizontal panels out of the basement wall. After the excavation reaches the basement slab, backfill could begin.
This seems like a lot of work and very expensive so I am looking for other options. It would be a lot easier if the basement walls and slab could be left in place, but they can't.
Appreciate any suggestions.