theCorkster
Geotechnical
- Sep 2, 2005
- 146
Hi:
I'm currently looking at some alternatives to address loose alluvial soils (silty sand: SM, poorly graded sand: SP) that extend to the water table (-10 bsg). In order to address static settlements above the water table, one approach proposed is to remove and reconstruct to the standards for engineered fill.
The obvious approach would be to dewater the excavation to provide a stable grade in order to build the fill. However, I suspect that given the size of the excavation (about 1 acre), dewatering will be very expensive, and may impact adjacent improvements.
I've also stabilized some soil excavations with cobble (walked into the unstable soil) and geogrid and coarse crushed rock 2 feet).
I'm curious to see if anyone out there might have some experience with this or some other non-structural ( rammed aggregate piers, etc.) approaches to this construction.
I'm currently looking at some alternatives to address loose alluvial soils (silty sand: SM, poorly graded sand: SP) that extend to the water table (-10 bsg). In order to address static settlements above the water table, one approach proposed is to remove and reconstruct to the standards for engineered fill.
The obvious approach would be to dewater the excavation to provide a stable grade in order to build the fill. However, I suspect that given the size of the excavation (about 1 acre), dewatering will be very expensive, and may impact adjacent improvements.
I've also stabilized some soil excavations with cobble (walked into the unstable soil) and geogrid and coarse crushed rock 2 feet).
I'm curious to see if anyone out there might have some experience with this or some other non-structural ( rammed aggregate piers, etc.) approaches to this construction.