Prestressed Guy
Structural
- May 11, 2007
- 390
I am designing a 10' tall concrete restrained retaining wall. The soils report is allowing 400 psf for passive pressure but leaves me with a sliding failure.
The existing slope is a thin layer of soil and weathered / fractured sandstone, on top of competent sandstone bedrock. The footing of the retaining wall will embeded at least 18" - 24" below the surface of the competent bedrock. I intend to place the footings in a trench cut into the undisturbed sandstone bedrock by sawcutting the edge of the footing into the bedrock and then chipping out the rock within the footing edges. This condition seems to me like it should be more like full bearing pressure.
I have attached a prelim sketch of the wall section. The top of wall will be tied with reinforcement to the concrete slab at the retained height. The wall will be braced with erection bracing to support the top of wall during backfill and casting of the slab. The analysis is more like a basement wall that is restrained by the basement slab and the first floor diaphragm but the basement slab will be the sandstone bedrock and the floor diaphragm will be the reinforced slab on grade over the heal of the wall.
Here are the test pit log and wildcat dynamic cone log for the pit closest to my wall. It sure seems like being cut a couple of feet into that rock ought to keep my wall from sliding.
I am also attaching a prelim run on this wall. I modeled it with 100% fixity at the footing to minimize the top restraint needed. The total lateral reaction of the footing bearing on the edge of the bedrock socket is 3364 plf. Given a 12" deep footing this also comes out to 3364 psf on the rock.
The existing slope is a thin layer of soil and weathered / fractured sandstone, on top of competent sandstone bedrock. The footing of the retaining wall will embeded at least 18" - 24" below the surface of the competent bedrock. I intend to place the footings in a trench cut into the undisturbed sandstone bedrock by sawcutting the edge of the footing into the bedrock and then chipping out the rock within the footing edges. This condition seems to me like it should be more like full bearing pressure.
I have attached a prelim sketch of the wall section. The top of wall will be tied with reinforcement to the concrete slab at the retained height. The wall will be braced with erection bracing to support the top of wall during backfill and casting of the slab. The analysis is more like a basement wall that is restrained by the basement slab and the first floor diaphragm but the basement slab will be the sandstone bedrock and the floor diaphragm will be the reinforced slab on grade over the heal of the wall.
Here are the test pit log and wildcat dynamic cone log for the pit closest to my wall. It sure seems like being cut a couple of feet into that rock ought to keep my wall from sliding.
I am also attaching a prelim run on this wall. I modeled it with 100% fixity at the footing to minimize the top restraint needed. The total lateral reaction of the footing bearing on the edge of the bedrock socket is 3364 plf. Given a 12" deep footing this also comes out to 3364 psf on the rock.