Recent Advances In Soil Nailed Earth Retention

Deep Foundations Institute
Tom A. Armour
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
27
File Size:
2401 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2003

Abstract

Different variations of soil nailing techniques have been used in the United States since the late 1970's. Such techniques owe their origins to French developments, which began in the early 1970's as a spin-off from European tunneling excavation support practice. The growing demands of urban infrastructure development and rehabilitation and environmental protection have created an active and expanding soil nailing market demand for earth retention and slope stabilization in the United States since its early developmental years. There is a clear need for a fundamental review of the large number of soil nailing techniques that are currently being used in the United States. Following a brief summary tracing the historical development of soil nailing and a generic classification of applications, this paper provides a review of the different recent advances in the design and construction of soil nailed systems. Discussion topics include nail design advances, permanent "top-down", structure support/underpinning, alternative face stability measures, composite systems, hollow bar and fiberglass nails and architectural reinforced concrete/shotcrete facings. Case histories will be presented to illustrate each of these advances.
Citation

APA: Tom A. Armour  (2003)  Recent Advances In Soil Nailed Earth Retention

MLA: Tom A. Armour Recent Advances In Soil Nailed Earth Retention. Deep Foundations Institute, 2003.

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