YoungGunner
Structural
- Sep 8, 2020
- 98
We've seen a lot of helical pier foundations required by the geotechs lately and I'm getting ahead of how to properly design for them. Most common we see out here is designing the footing as a grade beam spanning between piles which are spaced anywhere between 8ft to 10ft. I saw this picture on the manufacturer's website and it begs a few questions:
1) Does that helical pier embedded in the concrete impact the strength at all? Especially shear where that is supposed to be the support?
2) Is the flexure rebar fine to be below the helical pier cap or should the grade beam be designed entirely above the cap?
3) If I put a stem wall (let's say 30" tall) on top of this footing designed as a grade beam, but it's poured at a different time than the footing, do I still need to consider two-way shear on the grade beam?
1) Does that helical pier embedded in the concrete impact the strength at all? Especially shear where that is supposed to be the support?
2) Is the flexure rebar fine to be below the helical pier cap or should the grade beam be designed entirely above the cap?
3) If I put a stem wall (let's say 30" tall) on top of this footing designed as a grade beam, but it's poured at a different time than the footing, do I still need to consider two-way shear on the grade beam?
