几何尺寸与公差论坛

 找回密码
 注册
查看: 614|回复: 0

basement in flood zone

[复制链接]
发表于 2009-9-7 14:33:32 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式
basement in flood zone
i'm working on the structural design of a basement. the flood risk assessment stated the threshold to the property at ground floor should be 500mm above existing ground level to cater for flooding (although this has never occured on the site). the design of the basement is such that the top of basement will protrude 600mm above ground level to cater for flooding and will be wateproofed to prevent ingress of ground/flood water. we have been advised by a wateproofing specialist that this can be achieved with an internally applied liquid waterproofing system that can handle a pressure head of 10 metres.
has anybody experienced a similar situation, and are there pitfalls with this waterproofing system apart from the obvious workmanship issues and are there better alternatives, apart from any involving pumping which the client does not want.
also, the ground water level was found to be at about 2.5 metres depth and no long term monitoring of water levels was carried out. in accordance with bs8102 i was going to take the water table at 1.5 metres (1metre above ground water level) for structural design purposes. as the seasonal variation could mean the water table actually becomes higher would it be advisable to take the water level at ground level instead. and finally!!! in terms of flood water, if the water table is taken at 1.5 metre depth, should the 500mm of above ground flood water be considered as seperate hydrostatic loading or would it be advisable to assume full hydrostatic loading from flood water level. the ground conditons are clay. thank you for reading all this.     
check out our whitepaper library.
unless the waterproofing specialist can provide track records of success under similar circustances, i am keeping my doubtful eyes wide open to his proposal - a risky one to me, i would prefer a positive, more traditional, water proofing system from outside.  
on design, you should consider both cases - seasonal probable highest ground water level and the maximum flood level. you could, if allowed, adjust the safety factors to reflect the possibilities of occurance of the latter case, so under such condition, the owner shall anticipate some damages, but not catastrophic structural failures.
i agree with kslee 1000's skepticism regards the waterproofing. i would also recommend an external waterproofing system.
consider an interior applied membrane. a tiny hole through the wall will cause a bubble to form behind the membrane,  which will pressurize up to the static ground water static pressure at this depth. i would be concerned with the membrane then leaking or tearing off the wall. similarly if the waterproofing is a cement base, water seaping through the wall will tend to push the material from the pores that it is supposed to seal.
conversely, ground waterpresssure will force an exterior membrane onto a wall surface or force cementitious water proofing into cracks/crevices in the wall surface corking the seepage paths.
do not forget to waterproof below your floor slab. use a waterstop in construction joints.  
if the water proofing works, the building will float out of the ground!
civilperson:
yes, it would, and it has the logic behind: let the house float to the ground for ease of relocation, rather than sinking, buried under the mud.
just kidding. excellent point.
the site will be dewatered during construction and there is sufficient weight to resist uplift once the basement lid is on. fingers crossed it won't flood during construction though!!! actually the site has never been flooded apparently so i think the hydraulic report is a bit ott and will lead to the usual over design at the clients cost.
ox:
yes, so many disaters occurred during construction. can only advise the client to avoid flood/raining season, and have emergency plan/equipment onsite.
depends on who issued the assessment report, you may want to challenge it. however, if there is smoke...be prudent. if the owner can afford, let him pay the insurance, losing a house to a nature event is not a small loss, you could be liable too.

don't believe anyone who says he can waterproof from the wrong side.  when the water comes through, he will just point to the cracks and joints in your slab and walls and say that it is not his fault.
thanks for all the advice so far. i'm very impressed with this forum and the quick responses.
there's the answer - assuming the waterproofing works and it floats, install four 8" diameter steel pipe pile, one at each corner with u shaped hooks attached to the house to keep it in place during the flood.  when the flood subsides, it will settle back into place.  
however, if the house does not float, but floods, intall a large sump pump to dewater the basement.  however, the four pile will still have to be installed as the dewatering may cause the house to float.
in lieu of the pile, furring out the concrete walls with lead weights in the stud spaces will help decrease the net uplift.  
hope this helps.
mike mccann
mmc engineering
i've done some numbers and worked out that the basement needs alot of concrete to prevent it from floating-even when all the superstructure is on.
we have to dig out some soft soil anyway so i'm proposing backfilling with concrete that can be used to counter the bouyacy effects. i've attached a detail showing how the mass concrete backfill could be tied to the rc basement. any thoughts/comments?
您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 注册

本版积分规则

QQ|Archiver|小黑屋|几何尺寸与公差论坛

GMT+8, 2025-1-11 14:39 , Processed in 0.039645 second(s), 19 queries .

Powered by Discuz! X3.4 Licensed

© 2001-2023 Discuz! Team.

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表