dmband
Geotechnical
- Aug 1, 2012
- 6
Hell All,
I'm reviewing a set of gravity wall calculations for a segmental block retaining wall. Where the wall height begins to get around two feet, the designer seems to change methodology to incorporate the drainage stone behind the segmental block facing units. When analyzing sliding and overturning, the base width of the wall is equal to the segmental block facing unit depth plus the width of the drainage stone - essentially doubling the width of the wall. The designer also (conservatively?) only uses the unit weight of the segmental block for the entire width of the "modified" wall instead of using the unit weight of the drainage stone (which is heavier).
Has anyone come across this before, and if so, are there any publications that promote its use?
Thank you!
I'm reviewing a set of gravity wall calculations for a segmental block retaining wall. Where the wall height begins to get around two feet, the designer seems to change methodology to incorporate the drainage stone behind the segmental block facing units. When analyzing sliding and overturning, the base width of the wall is equal to the segmental block facing unit depth plus the width of the drainage stone - essentially doubling the width of the wall. The designer also (conservatively?) only uses the unit weight of the segmental block for the entire width of the "modified" wall instead of using the unit weight of the drainage stone (which is heavier).
Has anyone come across this before, and if so, are there any publications that promote its use?
Thank you!