Fogg Museum Expansion - Support of Excavation Design and Construction

- Organization:
- Deep Foundations Institute
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 2315 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2015
Abstract
The Fogg Museum expansion project required excavation and construction in a congested urban area in Cambridge, Massachusetts. A soldier pile tremie concrete (SPTC) wall provided the support of excavation and now serves as the permanent basement wall of the new expansion of the museum. The existing Fogg museum had a single basement level. The new expansion has a two-level basement for new exhibit space and an amphitheater. The east side of the site is about 20 feet above the basement level of the existing Fogg structure which resulted in a significant unbalanced load that needed to be resolved without damaging the original Fogg structure. The SPTC wall was supported with a combination of tiebacks and internal bracing. The final depth of the excavation was about 40 feet below street level. Strict movement control was imposed because the existing museum contained an Italian Renaissance-style courtyard. The southeast corner of the SPTC wall had to accommodate underpinning of an historic concrete ramp which was ultimately incorporated into the expansion. Challenges during construction included excavating the SPTC wall panels up to 12 feet into argillite bedrock which had occasional diabase dikes and sills. The following topics are discussed in more detail after a general project.
Citation
APA:
(2015) Fogg Museum Expansion - Support of Excavation Design and ConstructionMLA: Fogg Museum Expansion - Support of Excavation Design and Construction. Deep Foundations Institute, 2015.