Installing And Testing Multi-bar High Capacity Rock Tiedowns

Deep Foundations Institute
Steven Lowe Andrew Pontecorvo David Sposito
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Deep Foundations Institute
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9
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9296 KB
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Abstract

Buildings with large height-to-width ratios require foundations with significant uplift resistance. This paper presents a case study of the permanent rock tiedowns installed for One Manhattan West, a sixty-seven-story office building in midtown Manhattan. Site access and schedule dictated the size of the equipment for installing the tiedowns would be limited to drilling a 16 inch (406 mm) diameter hole. A three bar configuration of 3 inch (76 mm) diameter high strength threaded bars was chosen to develop an allowable capacity of 923 tons (4060 kN) per tiedown. Although the quality of the rock at the site was generally high, a challenging geologic condition emerged during the installation of one of the tiedowns requiring a creative installation procedure. Although the three bar configuration performed relatively well there are challenges with loading and testing this bar arrangement. Unlike single bar tiedowns that are typically tested with a high success rate, testing of a multiple bar system can result in some unsatisfactory results. This may be attributed to the installation challenges, difficulty loading each bar uniformly and/or the method of monitoring the test. Understanding the complexities is necessary to improve the testing results and achieve similar reliabilities of single bar systems.
Citation

APA: Steven Lowe Andrew Pontecorvo David Sposito  Installing And Testing Multi-bar High Capacity Rock Tiedowns

MLA: Steven Lowe Andrew Pontecorvo David Sposito Installing And Testing Multi-bar High Capacity Rock Tiedowns. Deep Foundations Institute,

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