To shed some more light on the situation. The geotech of record recommended the removal of soils within the building pad. The soils removed consisted of organic clays, fill materials, tree roots, old pipes, etc... The report recommended the removal down to bedrock (sandstone and shale) with the perimeters being cut a further 10 feet beyond the footing lines. The materials from one end of the site were approve by the geotech for use as fill (SM-ML). The fills were placed and tested and compaction was attained. However the material went in slightly drier than +-2% and in lifts of roughly 12-15 inches, which the contractor was advised outside of the specs. Density testing revealed that the recommended compaction was attained.
During footing excavation the footings were tested with a drop bar and favorable blow counts were attained. After a 6.5 inches of rain in two days the footers in one corner of the building had dropped 3 inches, there was no load on the footers. It should be noted that the site sat under 2 feet of water for at least 2 days after the rainfall. Test pits were dug in the failure area and the moisture contents revealed that fills were then above optimum moisture, and that the contractor had not removed the required 10 foot perimeter excavation. The geotech of record then performed SPT borings, which revealed blow counts ranging from woh to in excess of 50. The area in which the failure occurred was removed and backfilled with recycled material.Subsequently the eor has submitted an opinion that the materials were not impacted by the rainfall, improperly compacted, and that the whole building should be pressure grouted.
To me discounting the impact of the rainfall is way off the mark, as pictures of the fill going in and afterward is like night and day. He has discounted the washing of fines, but how would you tell if the material already contained varying amounts of fines? Is it possible that the rainfall event combined with the material being placed dry of optimum caused the grains to go through some type of reorganization and caused settlement or a loose or soft condition? Also is it possible that the rainfall event sufficiently raised the water table and decreased the bearing capacity of the soils?