The Design, Installation – Monitoring of High Capacity Antiflotation Bar Anchors to Restrain Deep Basements in Dublin
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Published:2007
J. Martin, P. Daynes, C. McDonnell, M. J. Pedley, 2007. "The Design, Installation – Monitoring of High Capacity Antiflotation Bar Anchors to Restrain Deep Basements in Dublin", Ground Anchorages and Anchored Structures in Service 2007: Proceedings of the two day international conference organised by the Institution of Civil Engineers and held in London on 26 and 27 November 2007, Stuart Littlejohn
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The construction boom in Dublin over the past decade has resulted in a demand for larger and deeper basements. These structures often extend several metres below the local ground water level and may have insufficient dead load to resist flotation.
This paper discusses four recent case histories where passive high capacity bar anchors, often-referred to as Anti-flotation Tension Minipiles (ATMs), provide the necessary restraint against hydrostatic uplift. In particular, it discusses opportunities where close coordination of the ATM designer and the basement slab designer can provide the optimum solution, both from a cost and programme perspective.
Due to the competent founding strata in much of Dublin, either the boulder clays, dense gravels or limestone bedrock, the use of ATMs is commercially attractive and offers several advantages over traditional stressed tendon anchors.
This paper concludes that full understanding of the appropriate design case and close interaction between the structural, geotechnical and ATM engineers is necessary to achieve the optimum basement solution.
Introduction
Typical Dublin Ground Conditions
Design Philosophy
Smithfield, Dublin
Spencer Dock, Dublin
Elm Park & Swords, Dublin
Conclusions
Acknowledgements
References
