arch 3007 exam 2 - foundations
piles and caissons are usually installed in
clusters and "capped"
instead of a basement, a building might have a ______
crawl space
frost line
depth at which soil in a particular area no longer freezes
footings
distributes building loads widely and evenly to the ground
friction piles
don't bear on anything... friction of soil provides the resistance - driven in clusters
_____ is important to all retaining and foundation walls to lessen _______ that either wants to knock wall over or push water through it
drainage, hydrostatic pressure
earthquake loads
dynamic horizontal and vertical, whiplash
cofferdam
enclosure used to keep water back providing a dry environment for excavation or repair work
water table
flows through and around underground rocks forming tunnels and caves
_____ allows water to move more quickly to the _____ or drainage tile
gravel, weepholes
hydrostatic pressure
ground water lift (floating boat)
shoring
holds back excavation when building the foundation
plate load test
hydraulic arm with plate measures bearing and potential settlement
core borings
intact, cylindrical sections retrieved by digging or drilling
wind load
lateral (side), downward, and uplift
soil
may consist of superimposed layers, each containing a mix of types
differential settlement
means the building is sinking unevenly which can lead to serious problems - Tower of Pisa
uniform settlement
means the entire building sinks or subsides at an equal rate (as opposed to differential settlement)
two broad classes of soil
non-cohesive and cohesive
dynamic load test (test piles)
pipes or piles are driven into ground... how easy it is pounded into the ground
cap
serves as a footing for column or wall above and distributes loads across multiple piles or caissons
categories of foundations
shallow and deep
slab on grade
shallow concrete foundation supported by well-compacted soil in middle and thickened slab at edges (also rafts or mat)
earth pressure
soil push, freeze/thaw cycles
bearing capacity
soils resist the downward force of a building or a structure - different soils have different bearing capacities
piles
steel, concrete, or wood forcibly driven
end bearing piles
steel, concrete, or wood forcibly driven to reach stable strata
angle of repose
the angle at which soil can be sloped without caving or sliding
caisson disease
the bends
deep foundation
transfer loads to a point some distance below the substructure
shallow foundation
transfer loads to the earth at the base of column, slab, wall
drainage mat
used in addition to waterproofing
dead load
weight of building materials and fixed equipment
live load
weight of people, furniture, snow
settlement
(sinking) occurs in all buildings as soil consolidates
bracing
(tiebacks) keeps the shoring from collapsing
gabion wall
- a large gravity wall - wire mesh baskets filled with rocks
coarse sand and gravel
- coarse aggregate - un-consolidated rock fragments - excellent for drainage and foundations
caissons
- concrete cylinder poured into a large drilled shaft - reaches down into earth to find solid bearing (bedrock) - 18" to 8' diameters - bottom can be "belled" to make a type of footing to spread the load
non-cohesive
- course grained, large particles, includes gravels and sands - best for building foundations
types of bracing
- crosslot bracing - rakers - tiebacks
test pit
- digging a hole or open pit to examine soil or to find water table
sand
- fine and coarse - lose, granular rock / crystal - between silt and gravel - good drainage - coarse is good for foundation
clay
- fine ground, plate-shaped particles - expands and contracts with moisture
silt and organic
- fine, sedimentary material (sand, clay, organic material) - stable when dry, unstable wet
types of retaining walls
- gravity wall - cantilever timber - concrete block wall
retaining walls
- hold back soil where abrupt elevation changes are necessary for building or landscaping - don't support weight but must resist lateral pressure from soil and moisture
sump pump
- installed under basement slab in lowest corner - doesn't run unless heavy rain or snow melt - collects water and pumps it away to prevent basement flooding
foundation resists:
- lateral (overturning) forces from wind and earthquakes (whiplash) - expansion and compression from freeze and thaw - hydrostatic pressure
foundation piers
- minimum site intervention (excavation and drainage) - soil not good or no need for subsurface spaces - usually on sloped or wet sites - aesthetics (lightly touches ground)
rock and bedrock
- native, consolidated rock - great foundation, excellent bearing capacity - difficult to excavate
types of foundations
- piers - slabs - walls - piles and caissons
excavation
- removing soil to install foundations is required for all buildings - necessary to get to soil with appropriate bearing capacity - some excavation is for basement levels - also necessary to deal with the heaving and contraction of soil due to freezing and thawing
cohesive
- smaller, finer particles - includes silts and clays
types of shoring
- soldier beams and lagging - sheet piling (timber, steel, concrete) - slurry wall (a narrow, site-cast, concrete wall
post-tensioned slabs
- steel cables run through sleeves cast into the slab - concrete cures and then cables are stretched - process creates a "pre-cambered" slab - allows for thinner concrete and less rebar
soil profile
- taken to determine layers or make-up of the site - integrity of the building structure depends on the bearing and frictional capacity of that profile
foundation
- the lowest division of a building - the substructure - constructed wholly or partially below grade (always some degree of excavation) - transmits loads (live and dead) from the roof, floors, and superstructure down to the earth
slurry wall
- used in tight, soft soil locations where threat of collapse is high - idea is to first build 4 underground walls (box) then excavate the site (dig out inside of the box) - while digging the 4 walls, thick fluid (slurry) keeps the hole from collapsing - slurry is then replaced by concrete - site (inside the box) is then excavated
foundation walls
- used to go deeper to find better bearing, to get below frost depth, or to make a basement - the footing, foundation wall, and concrete slab are all poured separately
dampproofing
- when groundwater issues are mild - moisture resistant cement-plaster is sprayed, rolled, or troweled on
waterproofing
- when water issues are more critical - resists hydrostatic pressure pushing water through - applied as liquid, sticky sheets, loose mats/sheets
