Foundations Flashcards

1
Q

What are the FOUR common forms of foundation?

A
  1. Trench or strip footings
  2. Raft
  3. Piled
  4. Pad
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2
Q

What is a trench or strip footing foundation?

A
  • Generally used for residential dwellings, for walls and closely spaced columns.
  • Foundations provide support for structures, transferring their load to layers of soil or rock that have sufficient bearing capacity and suitable settlement characteristics.
  • Trench is a shallow foundation that avoids bricklaying below ground.
  • Deep strip foundations may be necessary where soil with a suitable bearing capacity is deeper.
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3
Q

What is a raft foundation?

A
  • Entire basement floor slab acts as the foundation.
  • The weight of the building is spread evenly over the entire footprint of the building.
  • Generally constructed on a compacted hardcore base.
  • A layer of blinding concrete may then be laid to allow formation of the raft with a waterproof membrane above.
  • The concrete raft tends to include steel reinforcement to prevent cracking.
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4
Q

What is a piled foundation?

A
  • Long and slender reinforced concrete cylinders.
  • Deeper in the ground when load-bearing ground conditions are weak (weak compressible strata.
  • Driven piles are useful in offshore applications, are stable in soft squeezing soils and can densify loose soil.
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5
Q

What is a pad foundation?

A
  • A slab foundation system under individual or groups of columns so that the column load is spread evenly.
  • Concrete ‘pads’ support localised single-point loads such as structural columns, groups of columns or framed structures.
  • Generally suitable where the bearing capacity of ground is sufficient at relatively low depths.
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6
Q

Standard measurement of a brick?

A

215mm x 102.5mm x 65mm

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7
Q

What determines the type of foundations used?

A
  • Age of the building
  • Ground conditions
  • Size of building and loadings required
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8
Q

What are the TWO types of wall construction used?

A
  1. Solid wall construction

2. Cavity wall construction

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9
Q

What is a solid wall construction?

A

Solid brickwork with headers, normally at least one brick thick, with different bricklaying patterns incorporating headers (e.g. Flemish bond) to tie together the layers of brick

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10
Q

What is a cavity wall construction?

A
  • Two layers of brickwork are tied together with metal ties, with a cavity that may be filled with insulation.
  • No headers used
  • Evidence of a cavity tray, air brick or weep holes may be seen
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11
Q

What is a stretcher?

A

Brick laid horizontally, flat with the long side of the brick exposed on the outer face of the wall.

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12
Q

What is a header?

A

Brick laid flat with the short end of the brick exposed on the outer wall.

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13
Q

How can you tell if a property has cavity wall insulation?

A
  • No headers used.

- Can see cavity tray or weep holes.

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14
Q

What are the various types of defects associated with brickwork construction?

A
  • Efflorescence

- Brick Spalling

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15
Q

What is efflorescence?

A
  • White marks caused by hydroscopic salts in the brick work
  • Formed when water reacts with the natural salts, by way of a chemical process, contained within the construction material and mortar
  • Water dissolves the salts which are then carried out and deposited onto the surface by the natural evaporation that occurs when air meets the surface of the wall
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16
Q

What is brick spalling?

A

Damaged brickwork where the surface of the bricks starts to crumble because of freeze/thaw action, after it has become saturated in the winter months