Quality Control and Testing of Jet Grouting and its Interpretation in Relation to the Christchurch Town Hall Restoration Project.

Deep Foundations Institute
Paul Marsden David Chadwick Mathias Delapille Chris Hughes
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
12
File Size:
3014 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1900

Abstract

"Following damage caused by the 2011 Christchurch earthquakes, the NZ$127.5million Christchurch Town Hall Restoration project is due for completion in 2018. The building is undergoing extensive repairs and a strengthening regime to meet New Zealand’s New Building Standard. One major aspect of the project is the stabilisation of the soil directly beneath the building using interconnected jetgrouting columns installed a cellular configuration, the purpose of this being to decrease the likelihood and severity of foundation movements caused by earthquake-induced soil liquefaction and lateral spreading. The soils encountered on the site ranged from cobbles and gravels through to sandy silts with a significant quantity of timber and rootlets. This wide variation of soil types presented a number of challenges with regard to effective and consistent treatment by jet grouting. The paper presents an overview of the quality assurance practices and also the testing regime adopted on this project.INTRODUCTIONMost of the deformation experienced by the Christchurch Town Hall structure over the course of the Canterbury earthquakes was caused by movement of the underlying ground. Two primary mechanisms of ground deformation were observed:- Liquefaction of the soils underlying the building foundation- Lateral spread of surface soils towards the free face at the river edge which runs 20 metres from the building. This mechanism also resulted in additional vertical settlement of the building foundations.The overall foundation design philosophy adopted by the project team for the Christchurch Town Hall Conservation Project has been to improve the ground directly beneath the structure to mitigate against these two mechanisms of ground movement. Additionally, a robust raft slab is proposed to distribute the foundation loading more evenly and increase the ability of the structure to resist lateral stretch of the underlying ground.The ground improvement system proposed by the Client’s geotechnical consultants, Tonkin &Taylor, comprised a cellular arrangement of interlocking jet grout columns, this arrangement would effectively encapsulate the soil within the cells preventing lateral spread.In total 1,097 interlocking jet grout columns, extending over the entire floor plan of the structure, were required to satisfy the design requirements."
Citation

APA: Paul Marsden David Chadwick Mathias Delapille Chris Hughes  (1900)  Quality Control and Testing of Jet Grouting and its Interpretation in Relation to the Christchurch Town Hall Restoration Project.

MLA: Paul Marsden David Chadwick Mathias Delapille Chris Hughes Quality Control and Testing of Jet Grouting and its Interpretation in Relation to the Christchurch Town Hall Restoration Project.. Deep Foundations Institute, 1900.

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