scherry
Structural
- Mar 20, 2003
- 54
I got tossed a set of drawings purporting to show a detention pond with concrete walls on all four sides and a rectangular wier at the low end. the pond itself has a natural soil bed. the single structural wall section showed a dimension of 2'-6" with about 13 horizontal rebars in it. and of course all of the rebar was on the wrong face of the wall. there should be, in my opinion, at least three sections and an elevation at the wier structurally speaking. I know how to design the retaining wall, or I know where to look to find the info to relearn it, for the most part. What my concern is, is that a one foot cover at the base of the toe of the wall in a detention basin may not adequately protect the toe of the wall. furthermore, since it is just listed as "topsoil" (i did change it to compacted soi) it will be saturated and there could be a bouyant force on the bottom of the wall. the walls on two sides are not drained, theoretically, because they are below impervious surfaces and to drain the soils below an impervious surface into a water bearing channel seems counterintuitive. I have no information on the natural water table. But I am unsure that it is conc=servative to design these walls as if they were drained, when they are not. the third side wall should be drained since it has landscaping and water will drain into the soil behind the wall. At the wier, there is 6" of six inch riprap, which seems pointless and a one foot compacted soil layer, which I can live with. The anticipated maximum water height is 2'6 above the elevation of the lip of the wier, so for the wier wall, the pressure on the wall is direct water at the upper part and soil or saturated soil at the lower part of the wall. I know how (theoertically) to determine the active pressure of the saturated soil at the heel, and I assume that the water just exerts 62.4 PSF (lateral) over the height of the wall it is behind, but I assume that being saturated affects the passive pressure at the toe of the wall too, (at the back wall of the structure). i have no idea where to go to look for any standards on the (soil)cover for this situation. It almost seems to me that there should be rip rap at the toes of the walls inside the retention pond, or a clay liner to prevent the soils below the pond area from being saturated, but this is not my area of expertise, and i am more concerned with the effects on the structures than on the drainage. And of course this is late going out and i am going to be unpopular for bringing up any more issues, especially if they are non-issues. If any one knows of somewhere I could look for minumum standards for this type of structure or any insight on the saturated soils issues i mentioned, I would appreciate it.
thanks!
thanks!