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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

Presented by
Dr David Payne & Trevor Kokkinakis
to
Australian Institute of Building Surveyors
South Australian Chapter
6 June 2012

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

OVERVIEW

A brief history of footing design in South Australia

Domestic footing design methods


TMKs approach to Residential Footing Design

Research into extending current knowledge


Future design methods for mid-rise residential buildings

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING SYSTEMS USED IN SOUTH AUSTRALIA


Footing Type

1836+

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Unreinforced Stone
Reinforced Concrete Strip
Beams
Reinforced Raft
Pier and Beam
Deep Grillage Raft
Waffle Pod Raft

From the time of first European settlement in 1836 until about 1950, house footings
in South Australia, if they existed, were often built from unreinforced blue stone,
a shale or slate type of material. The relatively soft Mount Gambier stone, a weak
limestone material, was occasionally used as well.
With improvements in concrete technology after World War II and the availability of
pre-mixed concrete, house footings changed to reinforced concrete strip beams.
The SA Department of Mines provided general recommendations on footing sizes
for the Adelaide metropolitan area.
Reinforced raft footings began to appear in the early 1960s.
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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

TECHNICAL PUBLICATION TIMELINE


Author

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Thornthwaite (CSIRO)
de Bruijn (South Africa)

Mathematical Methods
of Analysis and Design

Aitchison (CSIRO)
Lytton (CSIRO / USA)
Woodburn (CSIRO / U of A)
Holland (Swinburne Tech)
Wray (CSIRO / U of Texas)
Richards (CSIRO)
Walsh (CSIRO)
Cameron (CSIRO / UniSA)
Fargher (Adelaide)

Arnold (U of A)
Mitchell (Adelaide)
Pile (UniSA)
Payne (Adelaide)
AS 2870 (SAA)
Jaksa (U of A)
Fityus (U Newcastle)
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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

KEY INFLUENCES ON DESIGN PRACTICE IN AUSTRALIA


Author

1940s

1950s

1960s

1970s

1980s

1990s

2000s

Thornthwaite (CSIRO)
de Bruijn (South Africa)

Mathematical Methods
of Analysis and Design

Aitchison (CSIRO)
Lytton (CSIRO / USA)
Woodburn (CSIRO / U of A)
Holland (Swinburne Tech)
Wray (CSIRO / U of Texas)
Richards (CSIRO)

Walsh (CSIRO)

Fargher (Adelaide)

Mitchell (Adelaide)

Cameron (CSIRO / UniSA)

Arnold (U of A)

Pile (UniSA)
Payne (Adelaide)
AS 2870 (SAA)
Jaksa (U of A)
Fityus (U Newcastle)

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

GUIDELINES PANEL, AS 2870 & FOOTING DESIGN AT TMK


In 1979, Engineers Australia formed a Guidelines Panel in South Australia, whose
brief was to collate all existing information on the design of house footings and
to publish a guidelines document that all engineers involved in the design of
residential footings in South Australia must comply with.
Following several years of discussion and amendments to the Guidelines, and with
a considerable amount of input from engineers throughout Australia, AS 2870 was
eventually issued in 1986. The current version is AS 2870 2011.
AS 2870 provides tables of deemed-to-comply footing sizes that can be used
without a need to carry out structural calculations.
Alternatively, a residential raft footing can be designed by calculation, provided
the designer uses either the Walsh Method or the Mitchell Method. AS 2870
recommends several of the key design parameters for both of these design methods.
TMK has chosen to use the Walsh Method in conjunction with its own Residential
Footing Design Policy for all residential footing designs produced in its office.
Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

IDEALIZED MOUND SHAPES AS 2870 (WALSH METHOD)

NOTE: The Walsh Method assumes that the behaviour of the raft footing can be
satisfactorily modelled as a one-way reinforced slab system.
The Walsh Method should not be used if the designer believes that this
assumption does not apply.
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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

IDEALIZED MOUND SHAPES AS 2870 (WALSH METHOD)

Modified Wf
Factor (UniSA)

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

AS 2870 DIFFERENTIAL MOVEMENT LIMITS

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

OVERVIEW OF THE DESIGN PROCESS AT TMK


Continuous soil samples are taken from a new or existing house site and the
soil properties are determined in the laboratory by an experienced soil logger
in accordance with AS 2870 2011;
The Characteristic Surface Movement (ys) is calculated using the soil log data;
If the design is affected by trees, either existing or new, and either on the site or
on an adjacent site, the designer must calculate the estimated impact of the trees
on the structure for which the footings are being designed;
Using this information, TMKs designer then determines the smallest footing that
can be accepted on that particular site for the type of house planned for the site.
Compliance with TMKs Footing Design Policy is closely linked to AS2870 2011
and uses proprietary information collected by Trevor Kokkinakis over his more than
25 years experience in the design of house footings in South Australia;

Finally, each design is checked mathematically using TMKs new in-house design
spreadsheet which uses an updated version of Dr Paul Walshs DUBAL program,
originally written in the late 1970s when Walsh worked at the CSIRO in Melbourne.
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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SOIL VERTICAL MOVEMENT BOREHOLE DATA INPUT

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SOIL VERTICAL MOVEMENT SUMMARY OF CALCULATIONS

NOTE:

In this example, there is no effect due to trees.

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SOIL VERTICAL MOVEMENT EFFECT OF TREES

NOTES:

Three input parameters are required:


1. The expected height of the mature trees;
2. The distance from the footing system to the tree or trees;
3. The tree factor Di /HT, which depends on the number and
arrangement of trees involved in the design.

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SOIL VERTICAL MOVEMENT SUMMARY OF CALCULATIONS

NOTE:

This example shows a summary including the effects of trees. The influence
of the tree group is separated from the free soil swell and is not reduced by
the centre heave and edge heave factors of 0.7 and 0.5 respectively.

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

TMK FOOTING POLICY


TMK have adopted a set of policies (rules) which place lower-bound
limits on the size of footings and the reinforcement which can be specified for them.
The rules which set these lower bounds are encapsulated in what is known as
the TMK Footing Policy.
TMK have developed a spreadsheet calculator which enables a designer to check
the Footing Policy limits for a particular type of construction on a particular site.

The TMK Footing Policy MUST be checked


for EVERY footing designed in the office.

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

TMK FOOTING POLICY

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

FOOTING DESIGN SPREADSHEET SOIL PARAMETERS

NOTES:

The Characteristic Surface Movement, ys, must be calculated separately;


The Design Surface Movement, yt, due to the effects of trees, must be calculated separately;
The values of the swell stiffness are left to the discretion of the designer, within the ranges
specified in AS 2870.
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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

FOOTING DESIGN SPREADSHEET CONCRETE PROPERTIES

NOTES:
The concrete strength is assumed to be 20MPa in all design cases;
The program assumes that all internal beams have the same cross-section.

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

FOOTING DESIGN SPREADSHEET DESIGN SUMMARY

NOTE: Ligatures must be specified in the Footing Construction Report in


accordance with TMKs Residential Footing Design Policy.

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

FOOTING DESIGN SPREADSHEET LOAD CALCULATIONS

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

FOOTING DESIGN SPREADSHEET TYPICAL RESULTS PAGE

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RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SUMMARY OF THE FOOTING DESIGN METHOD


In South Australia, design calculations for domestic footing began in the late
1970s, using a design model originally proposed by Lytton of CSIRO ;
Australian Standard AS 2870, first issued in 1986, provides tables of
deemed-to-comply footing sizes that can be used without a need to carry
out structural calculations.
Alternatively, a residential raft footing can be designed by calculation,
provided the designer uses either the Walsh Method or the Mitchell Method.
AS 2870 recommends several of the key design parameters for both of these
design methods in the Informative Appendix F;
TMK designers use a purpose-written spreadsheet to calculate the design soil
movement for a site, including the effects of trees if required, all in
accordance with AS 2870 2011;
TMK uses the Walsh Method in conjunction with its own Residential Footing
Design Policy for all of its residential footing designs.

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT PROJECT


In 2009, TMK has commenced a research and development project aimed at
improving current knowledge on the way reactive soils interact with buildings.
The first phase, which is complete, has involved the development of the TMK
Design Spreadsheet, incorporating the Walsh Design Method.
The second phase is underway and involves the development of a practical way
of modelling the interaction between a soil undergoing vertical movement and
a structure supported by that soil. A structure can be of any size and shape
and the soil model includes the effects of the various layers in the soil profile.
A paper intended for journal publication has been prepared and is currently
undergoing peer review, initially at the University of South Australia.
The third phase, which is planned to commence in late 2013, will build on work
published by David Payne in 1991 and 1992, and will produce a design method
for footings of mid-rise, large-plan commercial and general industrial buildings.
At the end of the project, TMK plans to have the capability of modelling and
designing these structures in 3D, thus extending the design tools currently
available to professional engineers through AS 2870.
Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SPECIAL CONSIDERATION - SOIL PROFILES WITH BCa HORIZON

Soil profiles with calcareous material in the upper layers and moderate to highly
reactive layers at depth can require special consideration beyond AS 2870 - 2011.
Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

SUMMARY
TMK has embarked on a research and development project aimed at improving
current knowledge on the way reactive soils interact with buildings.
From the completed first phase of the project, TMK designers now use a
purpose-written spreadsheet to calculate the design soil movement for a site,
including the effects of trees if required, all in accordance with AS 2870 2011.
The spreadsheet uses the Walsh Method in conjunction with its own
Residential Footing Design Policy for all of its residential footing designs.
The second phase of the research project is underway. A paper intended for
publication in an international journal has been drafted and is currently
undergoing peer review, initially at the University of South Australia.
The third phase will commence in late 2013 and will extend the design tools
currently available to professional engineers through AS 2870 into 3D.
In particular, the research project will allow TMK to take better account of the
effects of soil profiles with calcareous material in the upper layers and
moderate to highly reactive layers at depth.
Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

COMMENTS AND QUESTIONS

Copyright TMK Consulting Engineers 2012

RESIDENTIAL FOOTING DESIGN

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