cwrugrad
Structural
- Aug 16, 2006
- 17
I know these walls are more usually built by excavating, but...
Does anyone know how to analyze a wall like this for the temporary condition just prior to installation of the 3rd tieback, which is when the problem becomes indeterminate?
I used the approach described in Braja M. Das's Foundation Engineering text to analyze the wall as a cantilever wall, prior to installation of the lowest tieback, and as a wall with one row of tiebacks, prior to installation of the 2nd tieback from the bottom. But parts of the wall are tall enough to need a 3rd row of tiebacks.
The two approaches described in the 2004 AASHTO LRFD Section 11.9.5.1 Commentary (Tributary Area Method and Hinge Method) give very different results for the single tieback condition if the tieback is below the center of the pressure diagram, and the way they ignore everything below the lower groundline makes me uneasy.
Does anyone know how to analyze a wall like this for the temporary condition just prior to installation of the 3rd tieback, which is when the problem becomes indeterminate?
I used the approach described in Braja M. Das's Foundation Engineering text to analyze the wall as a cantilever wall, prior to installation of the lowest tieback, and as a wall with one row of tiebacks, prior to installation of the 2nd tieback from the bottom. But parts of the wall are tall enough to need a 3rd row of tiebacks.
The two approaches described in the 2004 AASHTO LRFD Section 11.9.5.1 Commentary (Tributary Area Method and Hinge Method) give very different results for the single tieback condition if the tieback is below the center of the pressure diagram, and the way they ignore everything below the lower groundline makes me uneasy.