kvillebasser
Structural
- Mar 5, 2004
- 22
I have been asked to design a cast-in-place concrete retaining wall that will retain water, not soil. As it turns out, the client wants to use this wall to act as the dam for a small retention pond. The wall can retain as much as 10' of water.
Typically, in retaining wall design, I would count on the soils on the heel of the retaining wall footing to help provide stability to the wall, but when the wall is retaining water, it seems to me that one cannot count on the water to aid in stability, and in fact makes matters worse, as the heel must now be calculated to have a buoyant weight instead of its normal dead weight, which makes the wall even more unstable (more likely to overturn).
Seems to me, the dead weight of the wall and the dead weight of the toe, and the buoyant weight of the heel are all that can be counted upon to provide stability. Do you guys agree?
Typically, in retaining wall design, I would count on the soils on the heel of the retaining wall footing to help provide stability to the wall, but when the wall is retaining water, it seems to me that one cannot count on the water to aid in stability, and in fact makes matters worse, as the heel must now be calculated to have a buoyant weight instead of its normal dead weight, which makes the wall even more unstable (more likely to overturn).
Seems to me, the dead weight of the wall and the dead weight of the toe, and the buoyant weight of the heel are all that can be counted upon to provide stability. Do you guys agree?