Jameschen6
Geotechnical
- Jun 28, 2008
- 25
This is a imaginary question. In a discussion forum one guy talked about differential settlement for a house addition against original portion. I am a geotechnical person. My feeling is that what he spoke are not in point by enlarging the problem.
His main concept is that all house will need a period of the time for settlement. When an addition is built to the original part which the settlement has finished long time ago. A differential settlement will occur inevitable and result in problems. I think this is right in a certain degree but has been over emphasized by him. If a geotechnical report, structural design, footing inspection and construction are all correct. There should be no concern for the differential settlement. Most of such problem will relate to moisture change, water leaking, weather change, insufficient backfill, tree cutting and etc.
How will a structural engineer see his points? Is there a different design procedure for a addition foundation to overcome differential settlement?
Thanks
His main concept is that all house will need a period of the time for settlement. When an addition is built to the original part which the settlement has finished long time ago. A differential settlement will occur inevitable and result in problems. I think this is right in a certain degree but has been over emphasized by him. If a geotechnical report, structural design, footing inspection and construction are all correct. There should be no concern for the differential settlement. Most of such problem will relate to moisture change, water leaking, weather change, insufficient backfill, tree cutting and etc.
How will a structural engineer see his points? Is there a different design procedure for a addition foundation to overcome differential settlement?
Thanks