Nearshore Pile Construction Experience In Burnie, Tasmania

Deep Foundations Institute
Thomas W. Scott Manh N. Tran
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
10
File Size:
1378 KB
Publication Date:
Nov 1, 2022

Abstract

Marine environments present a range of challenges for pile construction. This paper contains a discussion on the design and construction of marine piles for a recent Toll Shipping wharf upgrade in Burnie, Tasmania. The project involved several new structures including mooring, berthing and ramp dolphins supported by driven tubular piles with rock sockets, and an onshore mooring dolphin and ramp abutment supported by bored piles. Through the project, a range of construction challenges were experienced, including availability of tubular piles, the different penetration depths of driven piles into rock, the ability to drill out sockets when the piles were raked, the difficulty in verifying the design intent, latent conditions and ship impacts. The paper will present a summary of the different factors that influenced design concepts for the structures involved in the upgrade, and the challenges involved in the design of the structures. Following this, the paper will describe the methodology used to verify the design (including a pullout test), observations made during pile construction and lessons learned on how to limit risk throughout construction.
Citation

APA: Thomas W. Scott Manh N. Tran  (2022)  Nearshore Pile Construction Experience In Burnie, Tasmania

MLA: Thomas W. Scott Manh N. Tran Nearshore Pile Construction Experience In Burnie, Tasmania. Deep Foundations Institute, 2022.

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