Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings

Deep excavations in urban area can damage surrounding buildings. The current practice in assessing building damage is based on greenfield settlement computed from 2-D finite element analysis. This is less than satisfactory for situations where 3-D effect is prominent. In this case, a 3-D analysis is...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Halim, Darwid
Other Authors: Wong Kai Sin
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/13110
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author Halim, Darwid
author2 Wong Kai Sin
author_facet Wong Kai Sin
Halim, Darwid
author_sort Halim, Darwid
collection NTU
description Deep excavations in urban area can damage surrounding buildings. The current practice in assessing building damage is based on greenfield settlement computed from 2-D finite element analysis. This is less than satisfactory for situations where 3-D effect is prominent. In this case, a 3-D analysis is preferred. Unfortunately, the 3-D finite element analysis is a fairly complex and demanding task. A simple method has been developed to estimate 3-D settlement from 2-D analysis. The conventional method also assumed that the building would settle the same amount as the ground. This assumption is reasonable for buildings supported on individual footings without ground beams. For frame structures and buildings supported on rafts, the differences in building and ground settlements can be significant. A new method has been developed to integrate the soil-structure interaction into the analysis so that the structure stiffness can be taken into consideration. A new chart for damage assessment of frame structures has also been developed. The chart divides the damage into several categories. This study also investigated the potential causes of post-excavation settlement in deep excavations in soft clay. Results indicate that there are two major causes. The first one is leakage in the retaining wall and the base slab. The second one is under-drainage into a pervious layer that extends into the excavated area and exposed at the formation level. This research is numerical based with the aid of the computer programs ABAQUS and Sage Crisp. The proposed methods and charts have been validated against hypothetical problems and case records.
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spelling ntu-10356/131102023-03-03T19:22:13Z Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings Halim, Darwid Wong Kai Sin School of Civil and Environmental Engineering DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical Deep excavations in urban area can damage surrounding buildings. The current practice in assessing building damage is based on greenfield settlement computed from 2-D finite element analysis. This is less than satisfactory for situations where 3-D effect is prominent. In this case, a 3-D analysis is preferred. Unfortunately, the 3-D finite element analysis is a fairly complex and demanding task. A simple method has been developed to estimate 3-D settlement from 2-D analysis. The conventional method also assumed that the building would settle the same amount as the ground. This assumption is reasonable for buildings supported on individual footings without ground beams. For frame structures and buildings supported on rafts, the differences in building and ground settlements can be significant. A new method has been developed to integrate the soil-structure interaction into the analysis so that the structure stiffness can be taken into consideration. A new chart for damage assessment of frame structures has also been developed. The chart divides the damage into several categories. This study also investigated the potential causes of post-excavation settlement in deep excavations in soft clay. Results indicate that there are two major causes. The first one is leakage in the retaining wall and the base slab. The second one is under-drainage into a pervious layer that extends into the excavated area and exposed at the formation level. This research is numerical based with the aid of the computer programs ABAQUS and Sage Crisp. The proposed methods and charts have been validated against hypothetical problems and case records. Doctor of Philosophy (CEE) 2008-06-16T01:31:10Z 2008-10-20T07:04:50Z 2008-06-16T01:31:10Z 2008-10-20T07:04:50Z 2008 2008 Thesis Halim, D. (2008). Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings. Doctoral thesis, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/13110 10.32657/10356/13110 en 319 p. application/pdf
spellingShingle DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical
Halim, Darwid
Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
title Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
title_full Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
title_fullStr Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
title_full_unstemmed Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
title_short Effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
title_sort effect of excavation on performance of adjacent buildings
topic DRNTU::Engineering::Civil engineering::Geotechnical
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/13110
work_keys_str_mv AT halimdarwid effectofexcavationonperformanceofadjacentbuildings