There are a couple of options which you can consider, dependent upon what is trying to be achieved and what is being supported.
Option 1: The piles are there to support the element above, and any settlement is limited to the contribution from piles, not the surrounding ground. For the load transfer platform, I would be including high strength geosynthetic reinforcement layer(s) and then follow BS 8006-1:2010+A1:2016 and BS EN 14475:2006 (I'm based in UK). This would then be a basally reinforced platform, with the thickness being a function of the clear span between piles/pile caps. This would typically be in the order of platform thickness = 0.7 x span. This would mean the whole of the load above would be transferred to the piles, and if the ground settled between the rigid inclusions, then the combination of geogrid and platform thickness would transfer load to the piles (in theory a void could form below the lower layer of reinforcement without affecting the ground above the platform).
Option 2: The piles are there to reduce the total contribution of settlement but will settle along with the ground. Similar to use of VSC / VCC / CMC (Priebe design approach, improvement factor etc) where the higher load required to cause the rigid inclusion to settle, reduces load on the surrounding ground and then the overall settlement is reduced. In this instance the platform performance is difficult to quantify, so I would generally go back to first principles and run this through Plaxis FEM 2D and run a sensitivity analysis on column spacing and load transfer platform thickness. In practice, the optimum platform thickness tends to be in the order of 0.6m with a balance on column spacing. Whilst not necessarily required in the FEM analysis, I would also specify an appropriate geosynthetic reinforcement within the LTP to maintain its continuity following column/pile installation and re-working of the LTP before the next phase of construction (this is of more importance with VSC and CMC, but the principle still stands)