Numerical Analysis Of The Pile-Enhanced Raft Of The Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre In London, UK

Deep Foundations Institute
Trevor I. Addenbrooke
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
8
File Size:
988 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2002

Abstract

Stress reducing piles were used for the first time at the Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre near the Palace of Westminster in London, UK. The inclusion of these piles directly beneath heavily loaded columns was to reduce the high anticipated bending stress in the foundation raft, and to eliminate local yield of the London Clay beneath the column locations. Load cells were placed in one of the stress reducing piles during construction. The data showed that the pile carried about 30% of the column load. This can be contrasted with conventional piled raft design where the pile carries upwards of 80% of the column load. The build up of load on the pile and pile displacement have been accurately reproduced using coupled finite element analysis. These numerical results demonstrate the value of geometrically simple axially symmetric analyses for modelling a pile-enhanced raft. On site, excavation preceded construction of the raft and subsequent pile loading. Failure to model this construction sequence caused the shear strength to mobilize at the base of the pile first, during loading, whereas following the construction sequence caused the shear strength to mobilize at the top of the pile first.
Citation

APA: Trevor I. Addenbrooke  (2002)  Numerical Analysis Of The Pile-Enhanced Raft Of The Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre In London, UK

MLA: Trevor I. Addenbrooke Numerical Analysis Of The Pile-Enhanced Raft Of The Queen Elizabeth II Conference Centre In London, UK. Deep Foundations Institute, 2002.

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