Heldbaum
Civil/Environmental
- Jan 27, 2017
- 128
Hello folks,
In a nutshell, owner of the townhouse in new york city wants to enlarge his house vertically and horizontally, meaning going down around 12' in the existing basement plus he wants to extend the basement all the way to the rear (where there is no basement now) what means he would have to excavate roughly 25'-30' down over there which is a lot of course. There are adjacent buildings, he wants to avoid underpinning, ground water table is below expected bottom of excavation. The soil is class 3a sand with silt and gravel. No way to bring any heavy equipment in.
I am thinking about sheet piles that are pushed by a hydraulic jack. We would install two steel beams going from wall to wall (or new steel column to new steel column)and one beam across and attach hydraulic jack to its flange. We would put enough ballast on the top of those beams plus we could use the self weight of the exist. building. Then we would do that in stages pushing 8'-10' long sheet piles next to each other and brace them from wall to wall..then we would excavate 5'-6' so the first pile's tip is still below the dredge line and push another pile next to it..Please see attached sketch of what I would like to do. I think that way we would reduce a friction and make those sheet piles driving easier.. then the question is how to connect those piles together (moment connection) so it can withstand soil pressure and provide watertightness etc.
We would also pre-drill the soil before jacking up operation. I think we would need at least 30-40 tons force to push it it..
It is just my imagination working so please share if you have any thoughts on that issue. It will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Jack
In a nutshell, owner of the townhouse in new york city wants to enlarge his house vertically and horizontally, meaning going down around 12' in the existing basement plus he wants to extend the basement all the way to the rear (where there is no basement now) what means he would have to excavate roughly 25'-30' down over there which is a lot of course. There are adjacent buildings, he wants to avoid underpinning, ground water table is below expected bottom of excavation. The soil is class 3a sand with silt and gravel. No way to bring any heavy equipment in.
I am thinking about sheet piles that are pushed by a hydraulic jack. We would install two steel beams going from wall to wall (or new steel column to new steel column)and one beam across and attach hydraulic jack to its flange. We would put enough ballast on the top of those beams plus we could use the self weight of the exist. building. Then we would do that in stages pushing 8'-10' long sheet piles next to each other and brace them from wall to wall..then we would excavate 5'-6' so the first pile's tip is still below the dredge line and push another pile next to it..Please see attached sketch of what I would like to do. I think that way we would reduce a friction and make those sheet piles driving easier.. then the question is how to connect those piles together (moment connection) so it can withstand soil pressure and provide watertightness etc.
We would also pre-drill the soil before jacking up operation. I think we would need at least 30-40 tons force to push it it..
It is just my imagination working so please share if you have any thoughts on that issue. It will be greatly appreciated. Thanks!
Jack