THE ENGINEERING OF FOUNDATIONS A BOOK BY RODRIGO SALGADO POWERPOINT RESOURCES FOR CHAPTER 2 Contains copyrighted material.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Dr Colin Smith University of Sheffield, UK Director, LimitState Ltd UK
Advertisements

Gantt Chart.
Concrete Construction Part 1
SUB-STRUCTURE foundations.
Design should address: UNDERSTRENGTH OVERLOAD
Chp12- Footings.
Part1: Shollow foundations
1. 2 World seismic activity British Geological Survey 2.
Sharif University of Technology Civil Engineering Department Tehran-Iran Dam Safety An Approach to Prevent Dam Incidents.
Lecture 8 Elements of Soil Mechanics
Undergraduate seismic design competition EERI Student Chapter – Rice University Topic #1: Basic Earthquake Engineering Concepts.
Foundation Engineering CE 483
Commercial Foundations
Lecture # 2 Allowable Stress Objective:
A new assessment method for masonry arch bridges (SMART) Clive Melbourne, Adrienn Tomor School of Computing, Science and Engineering, University of.
THE ENGINEERING OF FOUNDATIONS A BOOK BY RODRIGO SALGADO POWERPOINT RESOURCES FOR CHAPTER 9 Contains copyrighted material.
FOUNDATION The foundation of a structure is the lowest part of the sub-structure interfering with the soil and the structure. It consists of some structural.
Damage Illustrations. Potential Bridge Damage Bridge Component / DamagePossible Cause Approach Slab or Pavement  Raised, lowered, cracked, or buckled.
Integrated Civil Engineering Design Project (Building Structure Design Example) CIVL 395 HKUST By : Ir. K.S. Kwan Date: 4/07.
SOIL, GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING AND FOUNDATION ENGINEERING
Pad Foundation Lectured by: Ms. Noorhidayah Sunarti
Footings.
Commercial Foundations
FOFFF.
Chapter 2b Foundations Shallow & Deep Foundations.
The ground must push up as hard as the building pushes down
Lecture on CE 4014 Design of Concrete Structures
CIE Soil Mechanics and Foundations II èSoil Properties and Site Investigation èShallow Foundation Design èDeep Foundation Design èRetaining Structures.
Details of Construction Lecture-2 “Shallow Foundation”
Investigation of the causes of movement and damage to an office building in the UK founded on Carboniferous Coal Measures mudstone. William J Marshall.
Roof Terms Span –Distance across the building. Roof Terms Run –1/2 the distance across the building (1/2 span distance)
Bridge Engineering (5) Substructure – Abutments and Piers
FOOTINGS. FOOTINGS Introduction Footings are structural elements that transmit column or wall loads to the underlying soil below the structure. Footings.
LIQUEFACTION FAILURE OF FOUNDATION - STRUCTURE COLLAPSE.
Axial resistance of micropiles : from French to Eurocode design Roger Frank CERMES (ENPC-LCPC), Paris, France.
Steps in Foundation Engineering Understand project and site Develop design criteria Identify possible foundation alternatives Conduct soil investigation.
FOUNDATION Engineering Design of shallow foundation
SOIL MECHANICS-1 DEEP FOUNDATIONS PRESENTATION TOPIC MEMBERS O8-CE-29
Roof Terms Span –Distance across the building. Roof Terms Run –1/2 the distance across the building (1/2 span distance)
Session 9 – 10 MAT FOUNDATION
Foundation Loads Dead Load Live Load Wind Load
Chapter 6 Design Basis and Safety Criteria National and Euro Codes - Limit State Approach  For structures entailing softening behaviour (cracking of concrete,
Lecture 2 Structural System Overview CVEN Structural Concrete Design January 15, 2003.
Engineering Presentation. Basic Soil Mechanics Soil type classification Gravel, sand, silt, clay Soil strength classification Granular soils (sand and.
GLE/CEE 330: Soil Mechanics Bearing Capacity of Shallow Footings
SANKALCHAND PATEL COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING,
Lecture 8 Elements of Soil Mechanics
GLE/CEE 330: Soil Mechanics Introduction to Foundation Engineering
INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
1 ROAD & BRIDGE RESEARCH INSTITUTE WARSAW Juliusz Cieśla ASSESSSMENT OF PRESTRESSING FORCE IN PRESTRESSED CONCRETE BRIDGE SPANS.
BHAGWAN MAHAVIR COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND TECHNOLOGY
The Engineering of Foundations
Foundations The function of a building foundation can be summarised as follows: To transmit the combined dead, imposed and wind loads from a building to.
SOIL, GEOTECHNICAL ENGINEERING AND FOUNDATION ENGINEERING
BRIDGES MOST IMPORTANT GEOTECHNICAL EFFECT- LIQUEFACTION
Building Structural Systems
PRINCIPLE PROPERTIES OF BUILDING MATERIALS
Architecture Mr. Graves
4th Annual Construction Law Summit
Residential Foundations
CIE Soil Mechanics and Foundations II
Introduction to Structural Design
Residential Foundations
Arch205 building construction wall systems
Collapse Patterns.
STRUCTURAL FAILURES-CAUSES AND REMEDIES:
Commercial Foundations
Introduction to Structural Design
Commercial Foundations
BUILDING CONSTRUCTION Foundation
Presentation transcript:

THE ENGINEERING OF FOUNDATIONS A BOOK BY RODRIGO SALGADO POWERPOINT RESOURCES FOR CHAPTER 2 Contains copyrighted material

THE DESIGN PROCESS

DESIGN GOALS Safety Serviceability Economy The optimum foundation solution transfers the superstructure loads to the ground in a way that minimizes cost (construction and maintenance) over the life of the structures without sacrificing safety or performance

RELIABILITY-BASED DESIGN

LIMIT STATES DESIGN AND WORKING STRESS DESIGN

TYPES OF LIMIT STATES ULTIMATE LIMIT STATES (ULS) : states at which a potentially unsafe/dangerous condition is reached (typically structural failure, collapse, etc.) SERVICEABILITY LIMIT STATES (SLS) : states at which the structure or facility ceases to perform as intended without loss of safety

Limit states for shallow foundation design Nature of Limit State Consequences IA-1 Classical bearing capacity failure (ULS) Excessive movement/collapse of foundation causes serious damage, partial collapse or complete collapse of structure IA-2 Structural failure of foundation element (ULS) Column is inadequately supported by foundation element, punching through it; this causes serious damage, partial or complete collapse of superstructure IB Excessive differential foundation settlement (ULS) Excessive differential settlements create excessive additional loads in the structure, leading to structural damage II Excessive settlement (total or differential) (SLS) Excessive settlements lead to serviceability problems, such as access problems, damage to architectural finishings, etc. III Stability failure of the whole foundation system or a subset thereof Collapse mechanism develops that encompass the foundations for the building or structure or a part of the foundations (a classical example would be stability failure of a slope on top of which is founded a building)

Working Stress Design Ultimate load Design load Allowable load Factor of Safety (FS) All load and resistance uncertainities are lumped in this single factor Ultimate load: the load that would lead to an ultimate limit state Design or working load: the sum of the loads under consideration (unfactored)

ULTIMATE LIMIT STATES: LOAD AND RESISTANCE FACTOR DESIGN

TOLERABLE FOUNDATION MOVEMENTS

Types of Settlement Uniform Total Settlement Non-Uniform Settlement Tilting

Uniform Total Settlement No structural damage Damage at interface with utilities Access problems Drainage problems

Non-Uniform Settlement Structural Cracking of beams/slabs/column Architectural Cracking of panel walls Door/window jamming Uneven Floors Damage at interface with utility lines Access and drainage problems Excessive Tilting

Cracks Caused by Foundation Movement May have any direction, depending on the direction of the tensile strain (cracks are  to the tensile strain) At a specific point of the structure, cracks have the same direction (contrast that with the web pattern observed in the case of shrinkage and drying) Appear on both sides of an element

Typical Building Structures Load Bearing Walls Frames