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House Foundation, Pier and Soil Support Questions

NorthTex

Structural
Mar 17, 2025
2
Hello,

Long post, but I’m cutting out some details to shorten it and I appreciate your patience in reading through it all. My wife and I are having a house built with a post-tension foundation on concrete piers. Most piers are 12” diameter, and 15 feet below original grade. None of them sit on bedrock. Soil tests indicate mostly low-plasticity clay all the way to 20 feet below grade, with equivalent plasticity index of 17, and potential vertical rise of less than 1”.

I’ve had concerns about compaction (or lack thereof) of the built-up dirt pad, so after the beam trenches were dug, I hired a geotechnical firm to perform Dynamic Cone Penetrometer (DCP) testing of the trench bottoms to see if the bottoms would be up to the task of helping to support the beams, and not just relying on the piers. It was determined that in most areas, the trench bottoms had a layer of about 6” of not-so-compacted dirt (that layer was actually quite muddy that day due to a light rain the night before), but there is firm, well-compacted dirt beneath that – probably the original grade. The geotechnical engineer said that as long as a concrete vibrator was used, the concrete would mix with the looser dirt/mud at the trench bottoms to form a “concrete mud” capable of supporting the house. So I told the builder to be sure the concrete crew would use vibrators, and on pour day (which was the very next day), they did indeed use a vibrator. However, looking back at video footage and based on my memory from being there the whole time, I doubt the vibrator went deep enough to reach the trench bottoms, and I doubt it was held in place long enough to have the desired effect. If I assume the vibrators didn’t create the desired “concrete mud,” and the first 6” in the trench bottoms were somewhat loose (and muddy), how much support, if any, will that looser layer provide for the beams, and will it tend to settle over time, leaving only the piers to support everything? Asking the question another way - is it normal and acceptable for there to be several inches of loose-ish dirt/mud in the trench bottoms? Is it likely that the concrete would have compacted or displaced that layer to any meaningful degree as it was being poured?

Being an engineer myself (but not a soils or civil engineer), I have been attempting to calculate the pier loading, assuming there is no soil bearing support under the beams or the slab sections. The foundation engineer told me verbally that each pier is capable of supporting about 27 kips, after dividing by a safety factor of 2 (i.e., 54 kips before the safety factor). He said this also assumes the first 3 feet below grade contribute nothing to the skin friction. When I look at the soil report, it says the first 9 feet are the active zone, producing an uplift pressure of 420 psf on the pier through skin friction when wet, while the bottom 6 feet are the anchor zone, producing 600 psf of downward pressure. The report then goes on to say that the pier load capacity can be calculated using 600 psf, but it’s not clear if that is meant to be applied over the entire pier length (minus the top 3 feet), but doing it that way, and adding the end bearing capacity, is the only way that I can arrive at anything close to the 27 kips. But I’m not sure it makes sense to do that, since the active zone could seemingly lose its load-carrying capacity when the soil in that zone dries up and stops gripping the pier. In such a situation, the load would be carried only by the anchor zone (bottom 6 feet), along with the end bearing, and that would not produce anything close to 27 kips. Am I right in viewing it this way? I contacted the engineer for further clarification, and all he would say is that his firm only ignores the top 3 feet. If I use his approach, and ignore any load bearing by the dirt beneath the beams, then my calculations arrive at a safety factor of almost 2 in terms of pier loading. But if I ignore the top 9 feet and only use the bottom 6 feet for skin friction, plus end bearing, then I show very little safety factor (around 1.0). I’m looking for folks who understand this stuff to help me understand better, and hopefully to provide me with some reassurance that my foundation will be ok.

Thanks for any insight you can provide.
 
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The 6inches of soft stuff beneath the beams is a pain in the ass. I would have definitely made them trim it out before concreting. There's nothing you can really do now bar make them break out your foundations but tbh its not worth all that. the upper 0.6inch or so of soil does tend to get a little bit disturbed due to trafficking, weather and just stress relief from removing the soil above it. When doing plate load tests we often get them to undertake the test at 0.1m depth for this reason.

Placing the concrete above it will improve it a little, but anyways I wouldn't be too worried about.

Regarding the second paragraph, I presume your foundation designer was in receipt of the geotech report when they issued the foundation design. If so then it seems they have deviated from specialist advice. If anything does go wrong, say you get a little bit of settlement, your geotech report is now invalidated.

I would send the foundation design to your geotech and have them review it. Might cost your a few hundred bucks but worth it. Send the comments on to the foundation designer. They may respond with a line like 'we have designed hundreds of houses like this and have had no issues'. That's fine until you become the one that does have a problem.

Sorry didnt get a chance to write a complete response, have to dash
 
The 6inches of soft stuff beneath the beams is a pain in the ass. I would have definitely made them trim it out before concreting. There's nothing you can really do now bar make them break out your foundations but tbh its not worth all that. the upper 0.6inch or so of soil does tend to get a little bit disturbed due to trafficking, weather and just stress relief from removing the soil above it. When doing plate load tests we often get them to undertake the test at 0.1m depth for this reason.

Placing the concrete above it will improve it a little, but anyways I wouldn't be too worried about.

Regarding the second paragraph, I presume your foundation designer was in receipt of the geotech report when they issued the foundation design. If so then it seems they have deviated from specialist advice. If anything does go wrong, say you get a little bit of settlement, your geotech report is now invalidated.

I would send the foundation design to your geotech and have them review it. Might cost your a few hundred bucks but worth it. Send the comments on to the foundation designer. They may respond with a line like 'we have designed hundreds of houses like this and have had no issues'. That's fine until you become the one that does have a problem.

Sorry didnt get a chance to write a complete response, have to dash
Thanks for the reply.

There are a few things that if I had known what I know now, it would have been done differently. One of those was removing the loose layer at the trench bottoms, as you mentioned, and I was prepared to tell the builder to pull the rebar and post-tension cables out of the trenches and do exactly that, but when the geotechnical engineer who did the DCP testing told me that the vibrator would adequately mix the loose layer with the concrete, I accepted that and gave the go-ahead to pour. But seeing how the vibrator aspect was actually executed left me with doubts. Another thing I would have done differently is to require that piers be placed at every intersection of beams in the interior of the house, instead of every other beam intersection, which is the current situation (the perimeter beams have piers at every beam intersection, so at least that's good, but more piers at the interior would have been a lot better in hindsight). As an aside, like you, the geotech engineer more-or-less ignored the top several inches and undertook the test below that layer, because he could tell that it was looser.

When you say "Placing the concrete above it will improve it a little, but anyways I wouldn't be too worried about," do you mean that the concrete will compact that loose layer to some degree and should help ease my concerns? Just want to be sure I understand what you're saying with that statement.

As for the foundation designer, he works for the same firm that performed the original geotechnical testing (20 foot deep core samples in two locations on the property), and yes, he used that soil report when designing my foundation. The geotechnical firm I hired to do the DCP testing is a separate firm altogether, as I wanted someone independent to do the test and provide feedback. I did send a copy of the original firm's soil report and foundation design/plan to that separate geotech engineer to review, prior to him performing the DCP test. He didn't have a whole lot to say, except to say that I have "relatively good soil on the property," meaning the land there isn't prone to much expansion or contraction as moisture content varies, and he also said that, despite the good soil, the builder still should have done proper compaction of the dirt pad with a dedicated compaction machine and should have done compaction testing as required on the foundation drawing - "no excuse" for not doing that, he said. The builder only used a bulldozer and claimed that provided plenty of compaction, which is questionable in my mind - plus I'm not convinced that his dozer operator ran it over every square foot of the dirt they brought in when building up the pad. And he didn't do any testing - said that was just "boiler plate" on the drawing, intended for more severe soil conditions. At least I can say that camera footage on the site appears to show that they built up the pad in lifts, and the geotech engr said that the fill material they used appears to be of decent quality for the purpose, based on his visual examination of the trench walls. So at least that's a little encouraging, but the effective compaction is the real question, and that's why I started trying to look into whether the piers would be adequate if they have to do the job on their own.
 
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yes, when I say placing the concrete will improve it, I mean that it will be reapplying the pressure that the soil had felt previously (plus a little more maybe). Soil at grade level loosens a little because of the removal of stress.

If you are really concerned, you can also dig a little pot hole down the side of your grade beam and see what its like now. but again, I wouldn't be overly concerned.

Re your dirt pad, what is this? A layer of stone beneath your slab? how thick is it? And yes it definitely should have been compacted in lifts with proper equipment. re testing, some single properties have testing done some don't, it wouldn't be unusual for no testing to be done. Its not the way it should be but it would be the norm in my area anyways!

Id be asking your second geotech to give their opinion on the issue of ignoring 3ft verses 9ft. If they say, yes should have ignored 9ft as there could be shrinkage and you could loose skin friction. Your capacity is reduced and you may have a settlement issue down the line. If this is the case then its a discussion with the foundation designer and them providing justification that ignoring 3ft is ok. You could also get a another geotech to do a review. Its literally a few hours work.

Another think you could do is drill some screw piles adjacent to your grade beams and bolt them to it. All more money etc but will remove any risk.
 

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