lexk
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 18, 2008
- 2
Hello, and thank you for your help in advance.
I have an existing ranch home (approx 24'x 40' with an addition measuring 16' x 24' basically it is an "L" shape with each leg 24' wide and 40' long - overlapping a square 24'x24') that I have lived in for 7 years. It has an unreinforced concrete trench footing measuring 10" x 42" that basically is sitting on 2' of peat with the water table at 2.5' (rises/falls ~1') and 20' from a lake. I would like to build up one floor over one of the 24'x 40' legs. There is no observable active settling under the proposed addition, but there is some under the other "leg". The main reason I'm looking at helicals is I want to span *some* of the addition resulting in ~13 kip unfactored point load. I'm mostly concerned with the remaining portion.
I have got elevations (approx 2 yrs ago) and tied into a telephone pole, and intend to check for settlement soon. If we assume there is none...
The question is - if there is no active settling under the proposed addition, can I simply support the second story with columns (focusing the load to point locations) and support these with piles? or should I worry about possible future differential settlement? Is this whole concept crazy? I'm obviously trying to save money on piles.
If it is settling (non-differential - which I find hard to believe) and I support a portion, I will get differential - but I just can't afford to put in helicals every 5 ft on the whole house. Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
Thank you, again.
Lex
I have an existing ranch home (approx 24'x 40' with an addition measuring 16' x 24' basically it is an "L" shape with each leg 24' wide and 40' long - overlapping a square 24'x24') that I have lived in for 7 years. It has an unreinforced concrete trench footing measuring 10" x 42" that basically is sitting on 2' of peat with the water table at 2.5' (rises/falls ~1') and 20' from a lake. I would like to build up one floor over one of the 24'x 40' legs. There is no observable active settling under the proposed addition, but there is some under the other "leg". The main reason I'm looking at helicals is I want to span *some* of the addition resulting in ~13 kip unfactored point load. I'm mostly concerned with the remaining portion.
I have got elevations (approx 2 yrs ago) and tied into a telephone pole, and intend to check for settlement soon. If we assume there is none...
The question is - if there is no active settling under the proposed addition, can I simply support the second story with columns (focusing the load to point locations) and support these with piles? or should I worry about possible future differential settlement? Is this whole concept crazy? I'm obviously trying to save money on piles.
If it is settling (non-differential - which I find hard to believe) and I support a portion, I will get differential - but I just can't afford to put in helicals every 5 ft on the whole house. Any thoughts are greatly appreciated.
Thank you, again.
Lex