Historical Evolution Of The Micropile "Palo Radice" - Inception Of The Micropile

- Organization:
- Deep Foundations Institute
- Pages:
- 9
- File Size:
- 682 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 2003
Abstract
As Technical Director of the Naples, Italy based Fondedile, a geotechnical construction firm specializing in static restoration of structures, Fernando Lizzi, Ing., devoted over 30 years to the pursuit and advancement of static restoration and subsoil strengthening. Seismic events, construction of new structures on polluted and/or unstable soils in urban areas, and a need to carefully preserve and restore delicate, war-damaged historical structures, manifested the need for underpinning projects. Traditional construction methods and approaches, such as underpinning with additional foundation masonry, were not suitable and would have further jeopardized the stability of the structures. The introduction of the palo radice (root pile) revolutionized the field of underpinning. At the time of the first application of micropiles, the industry standard was driven piles. The drilled micropile was conceived and first implemented in the early 1950s, as an innovative means to underpin sensitive, historic structures and structures in urban areas. Specifically, the new construction technique was conceived as a less expensive alternative, designed to accept structural loads, be installed in limited access areas, in varied working and sub-surface conditions, which did not involve changing soil characteristics, and had minimal disturbance to the structure being underpinned, or to adjacent structures.
Citation
APA:
(2003) Historical Evolution Of The Micropile "Palo Radice" - Inception Of The MicropileMLA: Historical Evolution Of The Micropile "Palo Radice" - Inception Of The Micropile. Deep Foundations Institute, 2003.