A Novel Method For Assessing The Reuse Of Under Reamed Piles As Part Of The Southbank Place Project

Deep Foundations Institute
Stuart Hardy Xiangbo Qiu
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
13
File Size:
831 KB
Publication Date:
May 1, 2022

Abstract

The South Bank Place project comprised the redevelopment of the iconic Shell Corporation headquarters in Waterloo, located on the Southbank of the River Thames in central London. The site was originally developed in the 1950’s and due to the monitoring of the underlying Bakerloo Line tunnels by the Building Research Station it has become a seminal case history for the long term swelling behaviour of London Clay. The redevelopment, undertaken by a joint venture of Canary Wharf Group and Qatari Diar, included demolition of the existing building (with the exception of the main towers) retention of the existing basement structure and the construction of eight new mixed use buildings, up to 31 storeys in height. The foundations for the new buildings varied according to the building height and the below ground constraints. Two of the buildings are partially founded in reused under reamed piles that were installed as part of the original 1950’s development. The paper describes the novel methodology developed to assess the re-use of the under reamed piles which builds on the guidance published by CIRIA and the BRE for straight shafted piles. The paper also describes the physical investigations and numerical analyses undertaken as part of the assurance process and the procurement of latent defect insurance by the client.
Citation

APA: Stuart Hardy Xiangbo Qiu  (2022)  A Novel Method For Assessing The Reuse Of Under Reamed Piles As Part Of The Southbank Place Project

MLA: Stuart Hardy Xiangbo Qiu A Novel Method For Assessing The Reuse Of Under Reamed Piles As Part Of The Southbank Place Project. Deep Foundations Institute, 2022.

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