Underpass Support Using Secant Pile Walls And Cement Deep Soil Mix Bottom Seal

Deep Foundations Institute
Carole L. B. Mitchell
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
11
File Size:
1138 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2004

Abstract

The South 180th Street Grade Separation underpass in Tukwila and Renton, Washington, USA, permits vehicular traffic to pass beneath Burlington Northern Santa Fe and Union Pacific railroad tracks. The railroad tracks were temporarily relocated onto a shoofly crossing while the permanent bridges were constructed. The maximum underpass depth is approximately 25 feet (7.6 meters [m]). The majority of the sidewalls are supported using alternating reinforced and unreinforced secant pile walls. Temporary and permanent struts brace the top of the excavation. Because the groundwater is about 15 feet (4.6 m) above the base of the excavation and the subsurface materials are loose to medium dense fill, alluvium, and soft flood plain organics, the base of the excavation was strengthened and sealed using wet cement deep soil mixing (CDSM) methods. During construction, CDSM-treated ground temporarily acted as part of the railroad shoofly shoring while the remainder of the underpass was excavated on either side of active railroad tracks. The combination of secant pile sidewalls and CDSM bottom seal allowed for easy excavation, even during wet conditions. Using a 35-foot-thick (maximum) (10.7-m) CDSM layer both to act as a bottom seal and to resist uplift pressures is a unique, dual-purpose application of CDSM technology in the United States.
Citation

APA: Carole L. B. Mitchell  (2004)  Underpass Support Using Secant Pile Walls And Cement Deep Soil Mix Bottom Seal

MLA: Carole L. B. Mitchell Underpass Support Using Secant Pile Walls And Cement Deep Soil Mix Bottom Seal. Deep Foundations Institute, 2004.

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