NinerStruct
Structural
- Nov 5, 2012
- 36
Has anyone had any experience with a building underpinned with helical piers which then had additional settling? Back in 2003, an existing building built in 1919, experienced several inches of settlement on the north and east sides of the building. The firm I work for recommended helical pile underpinning and there did not seem to be any problems until last fall, when an additional 1/2" of settlement occurred in a smaller area at the corner. So cracks have appeared on interior finishes and in portions of the exterior brick face.
Subsequent surveys have shown little to no movement in the months afterwards. I’m having trouble determining the cause of the settlement. A soils report from 2003 indicates that there are fat clays under the building foundations, which are about 9 feet below grade. The helical piers were typically about 5 ft. apart and went about 22 ft. to 27 ft. below the bottom of existing footing. Is it possible that the drought from last summer had anything to do with this? Looking at precipitation graphs, it looks like we had pretty low moisture when the building originally had these problems, and there are two mature trees within 15-20 ft of the corner, but I would have assumed that the depth of the piers would have insulated them from the effects of the drought.
Subsequent surveys have shown little to no movement in the months afterwards. I’m having trouble determining the cause of the settlement. A soils report from 2003 indicates that there are fat clays under the building foundations, which are about 9 feet below grade. The helical piers were typically about 5 ft. apart and went about 22 ft. to 27 ft. below the bottom of existing footing. Is it possible that the drought from last summer had anything to do with this? Looking at precipitation graphs, it looks like we had pretty low moisture when the building originally had these problems, and there are two mature trees within 15-20 ft of the corner, but I would have assumed that the depth of the piers would have insulated them from the effects of the drought.