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Mitigation of liquefaction-induced lateral spread ground displacement using an in-ground pile wall

NZ Society for Earthquake Engineering (NZSEE) Conference 2023 Auckland

Liquefaction-induced lateral ground displacements (lateral spread) can be damaging to buildings and their foundations. Buildings can either be designed/strengthened to tolerate such displacements, or ground improvement (e.g. compaction, grouting etc.) may be implemented to mitigate these displacements to a tolerable magnitude. For existing buildings that cannot tolerate such displacements, foundation strengthening is not always a feasible option and site constraints limit ground improvement options. Show more…Therefore non-routine engineering solutions will be required. This paper presents the development of such a solution (an in-ground pile wall to mitigate lateral spread) for a site occupied by existing buildings located on a reclaimed waterfront in Wellington. Lateral spread ground displacements cannot be reliably predicted and there is uncertainty in prediction of the loads imposed on the in-ground pile wall by lateral spreading ground. Appreciating these uncertainties, the design included both displacement-based and force-based approaches along with sensitivity analyses. The sensitivity analyses considered the uncertainty in the input parameters and in the analysis methods. Resilience in the event of earthquake shaking or ground displacements beyond the design allowances was provided. Show less…

Categories: Climate + Hazard Resilience
Tags: 2023
Author: Palmer Stuart J, Rolfe Anthony