RFreund
Structural
- Aug 14, 2010
- 1,885
Overview -
There is an existing slope that is too steep to grow trees and the curb atop the slope is starting to separate and slide down the slope. The client would like to put in a retaining wall to level the slope. At the bottom of the slope there is an existing sheet pile wall which we know little to nothing about. The goal is to not impact the existing wall. See the attached sketch.
So basically we would be taking soil from directly behind the existing wall and placing it above the new wall. It seems as though this would be inherently stable, no? We could drop the base of the new wall down and make sure that we have at least a 1:1 or 1.5H:1V distribution however I'm curious as to what would be the best way to analyze this to prove that the new wall is not adversely effecting the existing.
EIT
There is an existing slope that is too steep to grow trees and the curb atop the slope is starting to separate and slide down the slope. The client would like to put in a retaining wall to level the slope. At the bottom of the slope there is an existing sheet pile wall which we know little to nothing about. The goal is to not impact the existing wall. See the attached sketch.
So basically we would be taking soil from directly behind the existing wall and placing it above the new wall. It seems as though this would be inherently stable, no? We could drop the base of the new wall down and make sure that we have at least a 1:1 or 1.5H:1V distribution however I'm curious as to what would be the best way to analyze this to prove that the new wall is not adversely effecting the existing.
EIT