USTA Geoseismic and Foundation Design Challenges

Deep Foundations Institute
Athena C. Denivo Pablo V. Lopez Sissy Nikolaou Alfred H. Brand Rudivien G. Josef Ahmad Rahimian
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
5
File Size:
5979 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2015

Abstract

"The United States Tennis Association (USTA) Billie Jean King National Tennis Center (BJKNTC) site is located in the northeastern portion of the Flushing Meadows Corona Park area of Queens, N.Y. The site occupies some of the most difficult subsurface conditions for construction in the New York City (NYC) metropolitan area, with unique challenges from geotechnical, seismic and foundation design perspectives.At the USTA site, Paleozoic crystalline bedrock is found at a depth of roughly 300 to 400 ft (90 to 120 m) below grade. The geologic history of the site is complicated, starting from the early Pleistocene, when the ancient Hudson River temporarily changed course, flowing across Queens enroute to the Atlantic. It eventually carved a deep valley through the Cretaceous soils, in some places all the way down to bedrock. A series of glaciers advanced and retreated across the region during the Pleistocene times, filling the deep valley with layers of assorted glacial soils. At its southern edge, the last major glacier to flow across the region built up a ridge at the southern tip of Flushing Meadows known as the Harbor Hill terminal moraine. This ridge blocked the valley forming a dam, so as ice started melting away the valley filled up with a lake fed by glacial meltwater. Layers of clean outwash sand and varved silt and clay filled the glacial lake. The ice did not retreat in a steady manner, instead periodically readvancing over the previously deposited soil in the lake, then retreating far enough to let the lake drain temporarily into Long Island Sound, before readvancing again.As a result of this repeated sequence of retreat, advance, retreat, etc., there are places where a “crust” of desiccated soil formed when the lake drained, and areas with interlayers of outwash sand where ice readvanced into the lake. When the ice melted north of Long Island Sound, the glacial lake filling Flushing Meadows drained forming Flushing Creek. During the Holocene (roughly the last 11,000 years), as ice melted further away and sea-level rose, low lying areas filled with river sands and marine clays, along with coastal marsh deposits. Table 1 lists the soil design properties on site and Figure 1 exhibits the geologic section across the site."
Citation

APA: Athena C. Denivo Pablo V. Lopez Sissy Nikolaou Alfred H. Brand Rudivien G. Josef Ahmad Rahimian  (2015)  USTA Geoseismic and Foundation Design Challenges

MLA: Athena C. Denivo Pablo V. Lopez Sissy Nikolaou Alfred H. Brand Rudivien G. Josef Ahmad Rahimian USTA Geoseismic and Foundation Design Challenges. Deep Foundations Institute, 2015.

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