Foundations Flashcards
What are the FOUR common forms of foundation?
- Trench or strip footings
- Raft
- Piled
- Pad
What is a trench or strip footing foundation?
- 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.
What is a raft foundation?
- 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.
What is a piled foundation?
- 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.
What is a pad foundation?
- 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.
Standard measurement of a brick?
215mm x 102.5mm x 65mm
What determines the type of foundations used?
- Age of the building
- Ground conditions
- Size of building and loadings required
What are the TWO types of wall construction used?
- Solid wall construction
2. Cavity wall construction
What is a solid wall construction?
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
What is a cavity wall construction?
- 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
What is a stretcher?
Brick laid horizontally, flat with the long side of the brick exposed on the outer face of the wall.
What is a header?
Brick laid flat with the short end of the brick exposed on the outer wall.
How can you tell if a property has cavity wall insulation?
- No headers used.
- Can see cavity tray or weep holes.
What are the various types of defects associated with brickwork construction?
- Efflorescence
- Brick Spalling
What is efflorescence?
- 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