PE_JRM
Civil/Environmental
- Mar 20, 2024
- 44
I own a small cabin North of Atlanta, GA that is built on a 4" unreinforced slab. Structurally the slab details aren't good but it has survived almost 60 years with no cracking. There is no gravel below the slab and the slab doesn't have thickened edges to spread the edge load. The slab is obviously a DIY and certain areas are worse (spalling) than others. I've measured the thickness in a bunch of places and its 4" everywhere I've checked.
I am renovating the cabin and will increase the floor loads substaintially by moving walls, etc. I want to get a better estimate of the subgrade modulus, K. My objective is to determine that the slab is OK with the higher loads. I need a K value to use any of the slab design resources I have available. To get started I've been using k=63 pci which Terzaghi recommended in a paper I found for a stiff clay if you have no other data. Georgia red clay in the piedmont is known for being pretty sturdy stuff so I feel 63 pci is probably very conservative. I am in an area zoned agricultural so I'm not subject to the county building code. However the county code PRESCRIBES 1500 psf as an allowable bearing strength if that provides any frame of reference. The Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) Pavement Design Manual reccommends a value of k=130 pci (appendix B) for the county where the cabin is located.
I'm an retired structural engineer (PE) and have very limited background in soils/foundations. I'm basing my assessment of the soil on my experience trying to manually dig post holes in it and the crude data I've collected. The soil is extremely stiff ... A post hole digging bar is required to go to any depth below the surface. Anyhow, lacking that Terzaghi paper I would probably use k=100 pci or a little higher. What I'm asking is how would you assign a value based on rules of thumb, experience or simple tests that I can do? I'm OK with a quick and dirty solution. The project is not big enough to justify a geotech report and the consequences of being off aren't that great.
The required slab thickness isn't too sensitive with respect to the subgrade modulus but it does make a difference. I'm using Army TM 5-809-1/AFM 88-3, Chap. 15 for my slab checks. The technical manual is a pretty conservative approach but its the free resource I have that doesn't require expensive software. If the slab cracks its probably not a huge deal but I would prefer that it doesn't because it won't neccessarily behave well after cracking since it has zero reinforcement, including temperature steel and there is no compacted gravel base.
I am renovating the cabin and will increase the floor loads substaintially by moving walls, etc. I want to get a better estimate of the subgrade modulus, K. My objective is to determine that the slab is OK with the higher loads. I need a K value to use any of the slab design resources I have available. To get started I've been using k=63 pci which Terzaghi recommended in a paper I found for a stiff clay if you have no other data. Georgia red clay in the piedmont is known for being pretty sturdy stuff so I feel 63 pci is probably very conservative. I am in an area zoned agricultural so I'm not subject to the county building code. However the county code PRESCRIBES 1500 psf as an allowable bearing strength if that provides any frame of reference. The Georgia Department of Transportation (GDOT) Pavement Design Manual reccommends a value of k=130 pci (appendix B) for the county where the cabin is located.
I'm an retired structural engineer (PE) and have very limited background in soils/foundations. I'm basing my assessment of the soil on my experience trying to manually dig post holes in it and the crude data I've collected. The soil is extremely stiff ... A post hole digging bar is required to go to any depth below the surface. Anyhow, lacking that Terzaghi paper I would probably use k=100 pci or a little higher. What I'm asking is how would you assign a value based on rules of thumb, experience or simple tests that I can do? I'm OK with a quick and dirty solution. The project is not big enough to justify a geotech report and the consequences of being off aren't that great.
The required slab thickness isn't too sensitive with respect to the subgrade modulus but it does make a difference. I'm using Army TM 5-809-1/AFM 88-3, Chap. 15 for my slab checks. The technical manual is a pretty conservative approach but its the free resource I have that doesn't require expensive software. If the slab cracks its probably not a huge deal but I would prefer that it doesn't because it won't neccessarily behave well after cracking since it has zero reinforcement, including temperature steel and there is no compacted gravel base.