LargeDeflections
Structural
- Oct 16, 2015
- 4
Hey all, I have a perplexing problem.
I am administering the construction of a structure which has numerous underwater cofferdams for footings. Each cofferdam is driven to a depth of about 65ft on two sides but then as a temporary cofferdam driven for the "continuous sides" (the cofferdams progress linearly along the alignment and share longitudinal bulkheads). The excavation is about 19' under water table with 8 or 9 feet of concrete. The problem is, the tremie seal pours have gone quite well in terms of QA/QC and the "long" sides of the cofferdam have had quite good seals but the temporary bulkheads in the longitudinal direction have been consistently presenting leaks that require days upon days of urethane grout sealing. Are there any recommendations from the gallery for means and methods that might help create a strong bond between the tremie concrete and the temporary bulkheads?
I am administering the construction of a structure which has numerous underwater cofferdams for footings. Each cofferdam is driven to a depth of about 65ft on two sides but then as a temporary cofferdam driven for the "continuous sides" (the cofferdams progress linearly along the alignment and share longitudinal bulkheads). The excavation is about 19' under water table with 8 or 9 feet of concrete. The problem is, the tremie seal pours have gone quite well in terms of QA/QC and the "long" sides of the cofferdam have had quite good seals but the temporary bulkheads in the longitudinal direction have been consistently presenting leaks that require days upon days of urethane grout sealing. Are there any recommendations from the gallery for means and methods that might help create a strong bond between the tremie concrete and the temporary bulkheads?
