EastEng1012
Structural
- Aug 16, 2017
- 17
Hey All,
I am curious on how others approach the design and/or analysis of wing walls (e.g., for culvert headwall) or any type of retaining wall with the height of the wall sloping downward to match the grading (varying retained back fill height). Generally what approach do you take:
1) Analyze it for the section with maximum retained height at the start of the wall;
2) Use an average retained height across the wing wall length; or
3) Analyze at both the start and end (based on different retained height) and maybe taper footing heel length from start to end
My senior engineers have always told me to use the maximum retained height at the start of wall for the 1-ft strip design. This make sense in certain applications but could be conservative for certain applications (longer walls and/or large difference in retained height from start to finish). Anyways, it was a thought I have had in my head and curious what others have to say about it. I am assuming both 1 and 3 are appropriate depending on the specific situation.
I am curious on how others approach the design and/or analysis of wing walls (e.g., for culvert headwall) or any type of retaining wall with the height of the wall sloping downward to match the grading (varying retained back fill height). Generally what approach do you take:
1) Analyze it for the section with maximum retained height at the start of the wall;
2) Use an average retained height across the wing wall length; or
3) Analyze at both the start and end (based on different retained height) and maybe taper footing heel length from start to end
My senior engineers have always told me to use the maximum retained height at the start of wall for the 1-ft strip design. This make sense in certain applications but could be conservative for certain applications (longer walls and/or large difference in retained height from start to finish). Anyways, it was a thought I have had in my head and curious what others have to say about it. I am assuming both 1 and 3 are appropriate depending on the specific situation.