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Slab on slope 2

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WARose

Structural
Mar 17, 2011
5,594
This is a home/property project.....but I need ideas. I am thinking about pouring a slab on a slope. (See attached pic. Sorry if it looks sloppy to you.) The thing that worries me is: this is likely susceptible to a sliding failure because of the slope. (Needless to say, I haven't called a geotech on this. So I don't know what the coefficient of friction is. The numbers I've come out with put the SF at about "1")

I could live with the sliding down.....but, I really don't want the "undesirable" scenario (shown in the pic) to happen. So my question is: would having one of the edges (3 options shown) possibly insure the slab penetrates the soil at the bottom to prevent the "undesirable" scenario?

Before anyone asks: right now, changing the slope is not a option. Anchoring the slab (into the slope) is something I've considered......but right now, I'd like to focus on: what happens if it does slide down and can I control that? Thanks.

 
 https://files.engineering.com/getfile.aspx?folder=aee4438c-7c41-405f-b77f-e4b3c0e1a9bb&file=slope.4.8.20_001.jpg
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In my opinion, JAE is on the right track but agree with mfrad that cracking will result. You only need a thickened edge at the toe of the slope. You can also anchor the top if you want, just be sure to properly joint the concrete in between.

 
Agree with the above posts. Adding some teeth makes sense.
 
typical would be to include a turndown at the top and bottom, similar to SRE's standard detail. we do similar for canal lining on a regular basis and may be much steeper than 20 degrees. intermediate keys are difficult to construct and for a 20 degree slope, probably not necessary. You might consider shotcrete for this.
 
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