A summary of 20 well-documented geosynthetic wall case histories representing a total of 35 analysis conditions is presented. These case histories cover a wide variety of wall heights, surcharge loading, foundation conditions, facing types and batter, reinforcement types and stiffness, and reinforcement spacing. All of the production walls, including some that have been in service for 25 years, have performed well with low reinforcement strains and minimal deflections. Some of the walls were research structures that, although purposely underdesigned, could not be taken to failure, demonstrating that the internal stability design of geosynthetic walls in North America is conservative. Each of the walls was characterized globally with respect to internal level of safety, or resistance to demand ratio. Even when using nonconservative estimates of soil property values and perfect matching of the reinforcement strength to demand, the Simplified Method resulted in approximately 1.5 to 4 times as much geosynthetic reinforcement as that needed to achieve acceptable performance based on actual long-term performance of many of the wall case histories. Based on the analyses presented here, there is a need to re-evaluate the current North American approach to design of geosynthetic walls against internal reinforcement instability.
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Technical Paper|
January 01 2002
Global Level of Safety and Performance of Geosynthetic Walls: An Historical Perspective Available to Purchase
T.M. Allen;
T.M. Allen
PE
Washington State Department of Transportation, Olympia, Washington, 98504-7365, USA, Telephone: 1/360-709-5450, Telefax: 1/360-709-5585, E-mail: allent@wsdot.wa.gov
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R.J. Bathurst;
R.J. Bathurst
Professor
GeoEngineering Centre at Queen’s-RMC, Civil Engineering Department, Royal Military College of Canada, Kingston, Ontario, K7K 7B4, Canada, Telephone: 1/613-541-6000 Ext. 6479; Telefax: 1/613-541-6218; E-mail: bathurst-r@rmc.ca
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R.R. Berg
R.R. Berg
PE
Ryan Engineering and Design, Inc., 2190 Leyland Alcove, Woodbury, Minnesota 55125, USA, Telephone: 1/651-735-7622; Telefax: 1/651-735-7629; E-mail: ryanberg@worldnet.att.net
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Received:
December 09 2001
Revision Received:
November 25 2002
Accepted:
December 06 2002
Online ISSN: 1751-7613
Print ISSN: 1072-6349
Industrial Fabrics Association International, 1801 County Road B West, Roseville, Minnesota 55113-4061, USA, Telephone: 1/612-222-2508, Telefax: 1/612-631-9334
2002
Geosynthetics International (2002) 9 (5-6): 395–450.
Article history
Received:
December 09 2001
Revision Received:
November 25 2002
Accepted:
December 06 2002
Citation
Allen T, Bathurst R, Berg R (2002), "Global Level of Safety and Performance of Geosynthetic Walls: An Historical Perspective". Geosynthetics International, Vol. 9 No. 5-6 pp. 395–450, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/gein.9.0224
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Suggested Reading
Short-Term Strain and Deformation Behavior of Geosynthetic Walls at Working Stress Conditions
Geosynthetics International (January,2002)
Observed Long-Term Performance of Geosynthetic Walls and Implications for Design
Geosynthetics International (January,2002)
Soil Reinforcement Loads in Geosynthetic Walls at Working Stress Conditions
Geosynthetics International (January,2002)
Conversion of Geosynthetic Strain to Load Using Reinforcement Stiffness
Geosynthetics International (January,2002)
Use of reinforced soil walls bearing structures
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Ground Improvement (January,2001)
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