Chapter 2 Part 1 Substructures
Chapter 2 Part 1 Substructures
Part 1
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Wind load
Wind load
Dead load
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What is Substructure?
FOUNDATION is a part of SUBSTRUCTURE components
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Main functions of the foundations
To avoid any settlement or other
movement that can cause damage to
any part of the building (a stable
foundation should bear the loads
without sinking or settling more than
an inch at the most).
To increase the stability of the
structure by preventing its tilting or
overturning against winds,
earthquakes and uneven distribution
of live load (Lateral Stability).
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Selection Criteria
Loading of the building, big
load need big foundation such
as raft foundation or piling.
Types of soil such as peat soil
prefer piling or deep
foundation
Most economical but capable
to support numbers of building
or storey (pad footing or
pilling?)
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Selection Criteria
The loads that must be transferred from the structure to the soil strata supporting
it. This also should evaluate the ability of the soil to support the ultimate loads.
The capability of the structure that will safely transfer the loads from the
superstructure to the foundation bed.
The possibility and extent of settlement of the soil due to the presence of mines
and quarries in the vicinity.
The possibility of the underground water has sulfates or other salts that can
degrade the foundation materials.
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Factors That Need To Be Considered in the Foundation
Design
Soil Investigation (S.I) is needed to determine the subsoil
includes the soil type, strength, soil structure, moisture
conditions and the presence of roots.
Purpose of S.I-determine the bearing capacity, seasonal volume
changes and other possible ground movements.
Common methods obtaining soil samples;
trial pits,
boreholes,
window sampling and
dynamic probe test.
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Factors That Need To Be Considered in the Foundation
Design
For more safety precaution use factor of safety
FOS = 3
Increase number of bore hole or sufficient number
of borehole so that the result of the report is more
accurate.
Choose the critical point load for borehole
Every end of the building
Supervise the S.I properly make sure no mistake
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Factors That Need To Be Considered in the Foundation
Design
For the safety of the foundation design use the lowest
of bearing capacity value.
The engineer must have good enough data for the S.I
such as previous soil report, cutting or filling area.
Engineer also must make sure the original ground level
and purposed level or formation level while designing
the foundation.
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Factors That Need To Be Considered in the Foundation
Design
The correct parameter is important to
prevent from foundation failure that
may occur causing building collapse. It
will cause a big loss of material and
even peoples life.
Highland Towers-
Malaysia
Overturning
Shanghai-China residential building
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Soil Quality Is The Key
Building rely on soil beneath to stay put. If the soil under the house moves
up, down, or sideway, the house is in trouble.
The soil profile may be varies as we move across from side to side, and
when we dig deeper downward.
Strong soil- weak soil type range from;
The following are the different types of soils on which foundations are
constructed:
Soft soils - This soil is compressible and yields when loaded. Examples are
clayey soil and loam. Small buildings or ordinary structures can be built on
these types of soils.
Spreading soils - These are non-cohesive soils. Examples of this type of
soil are sand and gravel.
Hard or rocky soils - These are incompressible and strong soils. They can
withstand heavy loads without yielding. Multistoried buildings and water
15 reservoirs are designed on such soils.
Types of Foundation
• Strip/Spread Footings
Shallo • Pad Footing/Foundation
• Raft/Mat Foundation
w
• End Bearing Pile
• Friction pile (spun pile,
Deep bored pile, bakau pile and
micro pile)
• combine
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SHALLOW
FOUNDATIONS
RAFT FOUNDATIONS
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Strip Foundation
Most suitable, economical type of foundation
for small building on compact soil.
Strip foundation should be build/construct on
soil with high bearing capacity.
This type of foundation is also known as wall
foundation or continues spread footing
foundation.
Consist of continuous strip of steel-
reinforced concrete, from centrally under
load bearing walls.
The continuous strip serves as a level base on
which the wall is build and the width is
design to capable to support the load without
undue compaction.
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Strip Foundation
The greater the bearing capacity of the subsoil, the less the width of
the foundation.
Width of strip foundations depends on the bearing capacity of the
subsoil and the load on the foundations.
Refer table 3.2 for minimum width of strip foundations.
Types of strip foundations;
stepping strip,
wide strip and
narrow strip (trench fill or deep strip).
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Characteristic of Spread/Strip Footings
Low Cost
Ease of construction
For small-medium size structures with moderate-good
soil.
For large structures with exceptionally good soil or
shallow bedrock.
Spread/strip footing may be built in different shapes and
sizes to accommodate individual needs.
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Types of spread footings based on size and
shape
Types of Spread
No Footings Applicable
(wall/strip footings)
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In both
situations shown
the thickness (T)
of the foundation
should be equal
to P or 150mm,
whichever is
greater T T
T=P or 150mm
(whichever
greater) Foundation width Foundation width should be
should not be less than not less than the
the appropriate appropriate dimensions in
dimension in Table 3.2 Table 3.2 plus offset
dimensions A1 and A2
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If P is greater than T, then the
foundation may shear at 45°
reducing the width of the
foundation and bearing area.
The foundation fails
where tension is P
exerted on the concrete
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When strip foundation used in
sloping sites-stepped the
foundation.
The full thickness of the upper
foundation should overlap
twice twice the height of the
step (O=2xT), or 300 mm
whichever is greater.
The brickwork and blockwork
on the top of the foundation
should tie in at the step to
avoid the needs of cutting
bricks/blocks and to avoid the
possibility of reducing the
STEPPING STRIP stability of the wall.
FOUNDATIONS
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WIDE STRIP FOUNDATIONS
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Rectangular Spread Footings
It have plan dimension of B x L, where L is the longest dimension.
These are useful when obstructions prevent construction of a square footing
with a sufficiently large base area and when large moment loads are
present.
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Circular Spread Footings
This foundation are round in
plan view.
These are more frequently
used as foundation for light
standard, flagpoles, and
power transmission line.
If these foundation extend to a
large depth, they may be have
more like a deep foundation.
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Continuous Spread Footings
This type of foundation is also known as wall foundation
or strip foundation.
It uses is to support bearing wall.
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Ring Spread Footings
This footing are continuous footing
that been wrapped into a circle.
This type of footing is commonly
used to support the walls of above-
ground circular storage tanks.
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Forces pushing down
must equal the forces
pushing up -
EQUILIBRIUM
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Heave
Subside
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Problems if the rules are not The load spreads at about
followed 400 through the foundation
(P>T)
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Loads Acting on the Foundation
The foundation has to bear more than just the
load of the superstructure.
Marked out and excavate The clean and leveled Formwork for the footing
ground to correct level. ground then poured with installed at the correct
Excavation level should up 50mm thickness lean position
to good load bearing concrete.
strata.
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Combined Footing Foundation
In this type, the two walls or
columns of a superstructure are
provided with a single
combined footing.
This is designed so that the
center of gravity of the
supporting area is in proportion
to the center of gravity of the
tow column loads.
These are usefull when These can be rectangular or
columns are located too close
together for each to have its trapezoidal in shape.
own footing.
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RAFT FOUNDATION
Depending on its position raft
foundation also known as Mat
foundation in floating position.
Sometimes also called as
Floating Foundation.
Used where heavily
constructed loads are to be
distributed over a large surface
area.
It is used where the soil is
marshy, clayey or soft, with
weak bearing capacity.
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RAFT FOUNDATION
This consists of
reinforced concrete
slabs covering the entire
area of construction,
like a floor.
Always made of
reinforced concrete.
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SIMPLE RAFT FOUNDATION
RAFT FOUNDATION
If ground pressures
are likely to be
excessive at
different seasons,
reinforcement may
be required; this is
known as fabric
when in sheet mesh
form.
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Conditions for Raft/Mat Foundations
-Structural loads require large area to spread the load
-Soil is erratic and prone to differential settlements
-Structural loads are erratic
-Unevenly distributed lateral loads
-Uplift loads are larger than spread footings can
accommodate;
-Mat foundations are easier to waterproof
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