Martino8
Structural
- May 27, 2021
- 20
We're working on a site with a new 3-story building replacing a previous structure. Prior to the footing excavations they had a utility locating service come out and discovered 3 lines (4" + 4" + 3" water and storm lines) running directly under a highly loaded bearing line! The pipes are approx 20-years old PVC spaced approx 10" apart with only 6" to 12" below the bottom of the footings! The bearing line consists of 18" wide lightly loaded footings with stemwalls between heavily loaded spread footings (max = 55kips) spaced at about 25ft oc.
The contractor is claiming they've solved a similar condition on another project by encapsulating the piping back to subgrade with controlled density fill (CDF) and then poured the footings on that. They are highly motivated to deal with the utilities vs relocating them (claiming an added month to the schedule). We haven't made any promises, but said we'd do some homework and look into the matter.
It would be pretty easy to enlarge the footings with no support assumed over the width of the utitlities and verify that the CDF has sufficient strenth to bridge over the width of each pipe. However, we have concerns regarding the intended load path vs the actual stiffness of the PVC lines. If they attract enough load to cause a leak, they could become a major repair risk down the line.
Anyone have an experience to share with something like this?
The contractor is claiming they've solved a similar condition on another project by encapsulating the piping back to subgrade with controlled density fill (CDF) and then poured the footings on that. They are highly motivated to deal with the utilities vs relocating them (claiming an added month to the schedule). We haven't made any promises, but said we'd do some homework and look into the matter.
It would be pretty easy to enlarge the footings with no support assumed over the width of the utitlities and verify that the CDF has sufficient strenth to bridge over the width of each pipe. However, we have concerns regarding the intended load path vs the actual stiffness of the PVC lines. If they attract enough load to cause a leak, they could become a major repair risk down the line.
Anyone have an experience to share with something like this?