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Analysis and Proportioning of Retaining Walls

This document summarizes different types of retaining walls, including gravity, cantilever, counterfort, and buttress walls. It describes the common proportions of these walls based on height and discusses the key forces that must be considered in retaining wall design, such as active and passive earth pressures, surcharge loads, and water pressure. It also outlines the stability checks that must be performed, including sliding stability, overturning stability, foundation bearing capacity, and overall or deep foundation stability. Retaining walls must be designed to meet minimum safety factors of 1.5 to 2.0 depending on the soil type.

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eph
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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
589 views

Analysis and Proportioning of Retaining Walls

This document summarizes different types of retaining walls, including gravity, cantilever, counterfort, and buttress walls. It describes the common proportions of these walls based on height and discusses the key forces that must be considered in retaining wall design, such as active and passive earth pressures, surcharge loads, and water pressure. It also outlines the stability checks that must be performed, including sliding stability, overturning stability, foundation bearing capacity, and overall or deep foundation stability. Retaining walls must be designed to meet minimum safety factors of 1.5 to 2.0 depending on the soil type.

Uploaded by

eph
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Foundation Engineering

4. Analysis and Proportioning of Retaining walls

Retaining walls are structures used to provide stability of earth or other material where
conditions disallow the mass to assume its natural slope.
Common Types of retaining walls
1. Gravity walls:- made of plain concrete or stone masonry
- depends upon its weight for stability
- trapezoidal in section with the base projecting beyond the face and back of the wall.
- no tensile stress in any portion of the wall
- economically used for walls less than 6m high

2.

Cantilever walls
- made of reinforced concrete material
- inverted T-shaped in section with each projecting acts as a cantilever
- economically used for walls greater than 6 m high
-

Vertical stem
Toe
Heal

Foundation Engineering

3. Counterfort walls
- made of reinforced concrete materials
- consists of cantilever wall with vertical brackets known as counterfort placed behind face
of wall
- ordinarily used for walls height greater than 6.0m

Counterfort

4. Buttress walls
-

same as counterfort except that the vertical brackets are on the opposite side of the
backfill

Vertical stem
Toe
Heal

Foundation Engineering

Common Proportions of Retaining walls


The usual practice in the design of retaining walls is to assign tentative dimensions and then
check for the overall stability of the structure. In figures shown below the common proportions
based on experience are indicated for the three types of retaining walls.

30cm to H/2

i) Gravity Wall

1
50
lt = Df/2 to Df

lh = 10 to 15cm

Df = H/8 to H/6
B = H/2 to H

ii) Cantilever wall

Min. 30cm

1
50
lt = B/3

bs = H/12 to H/10

Df = H/12 to H/10
B = 0.4 to 0.7H

Foundation Engineering

i) Counterfort wall

Min. 30cm

1
50

Min. 30cm

Df = H/14 to H/12
H/14 to H/12

H/14 to H/12

B = 0.4 to 0.7H
Forces on Retaining Walls
The forces that should be considered in the design of retaining walls include
i)

Active and passive earth pressures

ii)

Dead weight including the weight of the wall and portion of soil mass that is
considered to act on the retaining structure

iii)

Surcharge including live loads, if any

iv)

Water pressure, if any

v)

Contact pressure under the base of the structure

PA

WC

WS
Fr

qt
Rs

qh

Foundation Engineering
Fr = Rstan + CB ,

Rs = WC +Ws +PA sin

= to (of foundation soil) , C= C to C (of foundation soil)

Stability of Retaining Walls


Retaining walls should be designed to provide adequate stability against sliding, overturning,
foundation bearing failure and overall or deep foundation failure.
1. Sliding stability
Factor of safety =

Horizontal resisting force FR


=
Horizontasliding force
PAh

Factor of safety 1.5 for granular soils


Factor of safety 2.0 for cohesive soils
2. Overturning Stability
Factor of safety =

Sum of moments to resist overturnin g M s


=
Sum of overturnin g moments
Mo
R

PAv

PA

PAh
h1

b1

Ms = Wb1,
Mo = PAhh1-PAvB
Factor of safety 1.5 for granular backfill
Factor of safety 2.0 for cohesive backfill
If the line of action of the resultant force on wall acts within the middle third width of the
base, wall is safe against overturning
3. Foundation stability

Foundation Engineering

PA

W
Y
Rv
Rh
qh

qt
B

qt

qh

Rv 6e
1
B
B

Where e= eccentricity of Rv
qt qall , qall = qult/F.S
F. S = Factor of safety = 2 and 3 for granular and cohesive soils, respectively.
4. Deep foundation failure ( Overall stability)
If layer of weak soil is located within a depth of about 1 times the height of the retaining
wall the overall stability of retaining wall should be investigated. E.g. using Swedish circle
method

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