UTvoler
Structural
- Oct 7, 2010
- 49
Hi all,
First project on the NC coast coming up; all my projects have been inland thus far. Project is in flood Zone AE with finish floor above the flood elevation, so at the beach but not underwater. Geotech asked if we needed a liquefaction potential analysis, to which I responded "huh??" I did a little googling and reading, and since we're 300-yds from the water and presumably on sand responded yes. Proposal came in, included a 100-ft boring and CPT and was reasonably expensive. Discussed with the geotech, and he indicated in his long career he had only done the CPT/liquefaction analysis a few times for projects in the same types of locations. I asked who decides it's required, and he said it was up to the SER. He also volunteered that it was his understanding that the analysis was not required because wind controls the structural design rather than seismic. We settled on excluding the 100-ft boring and CPT, and he would review the standard 20-ft borings with me to help me decide whether there are any soil/water table conditions that might point to needing to the liquefaction analysis. So my questions:
-What experience do you guys have; who decides whether the liquefaction analysis is required; SER or Geotech? Is the approach described above to get a "standard" investigation with the results to guide whether further investigation is warranted reasonable?
-Whether or not seismic controls the structural design (I'm certain it won't with 134mph windspeed), if there is risk for liquefaction wouldn't it need to be accounted for in foundation design even if wind controls the overall structural design?
-Not clear on ASCE 7-16 20.3. I checked the period of our building, and it's less than 0.5s so we meet the exception. Geotech is expecting site class D based on his experience, but if it is determined that there is liquefiable soils than that drops us down to a Site Class F but a site response analysis is not required due to meeting the exception? Is that the gist?
Any thoughts/experience is appreciated!
First project on the NC coast coming up; all my projects have been inland thus far. Project is in flood Zone AE with finish floor above the flood elevation, so at the beach but not underwater. Geotech asked if we needed a liquefaction potential analysis, to which I responded "huh??" I did a little googling and reading, and since we're 300-yds from the water and presumably on sand responded yes. Proposal came in, included a 100-ft boring and CPT and was reasonably expensive. Discussed with the geotech, and he indicated in his long career he had only done the CPT/liquefaction analysis a few times for projects in the same types of locations. I asked who decides it's required, and he said it was up to the SER. He also volunteered that it was his understanding that the analysis was not required because wind controls the structural design rather than seismic. We settled on excluding the 100-ft boring and CPT, and he would review the standard 20-ft borings with me to help me decide whether there are any soil/water table conditions that might point to needing to the liquefaction analysis. So my questions:
-What experience do you guys have; who decides whether the liquefaction analysis is required; SER or Geotech? Is the approach described above to get a "standard" investigation with the results to guide whether further investigation is warranted reasonable?
-Whether or not seismic controls the structural design (I'm certain it won't with 134mph windspeed), if there is risk for liquefaction wouldn't it need to be accounted for in foundation design even if wind controls the overall structural design?
-Not clear on ASCE 7-16 20.3. I checked the period of our building, and it's less than 0.5s so we meet the exception. Geotech is expecting site class D based on his experience, but if it is determined that there is liquefiable soils than that drops us down to a Site Class F but a site response analysis is not required due to meeting the exception? Is that the gist?
Any thoughts/experience is appreciated!