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The Structural Engineer
Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 65, Issue 6, 1987

Date published

N/A

Citation

The Structural Engineer, Volume 65, Issue 6, 1987

Price

Standard: £10 + VAT
Members/Subscribers: Free

The problem
Claims for extension of time and for additional loss and expense due to disruption of work on site have become a pervasive feature of life in the construction industry since the war. More recently, there have been very significant increases in the insurance premiums paid by professional offices for professional indemnity insurance.

D. Azzaro

Additional information

Format:
PDF
Publisher:
The Institution of Structural Engineers

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Issue 6

Related Resources & Events

The Structural Engineer
<h4>Verulam</h4>

Verulam

Tensile stresses in concrete Mr J, T. Chase of Worcester continues our correspondence, following Mr Pannell’s letter in July 1986, on the queried justification for reliance on tensile stresses in design in unreinforced concrete. Mr Pannell referred to the subject specifically in relation to the use of minipiles to strengthen ground slabs where settlement has occurred. Mr Chase believes that there is no need in such cases to appeal to tensile strength, since in practice arching action offers support. He writes: In the particular case of minipiles supporting a plain concrete slab on a grid of 1.0-1.5 m in dwellings, I believe the slab is supported by arching action within its thickness. In practice, the slab acts as a series of mutually supporting domes until an edge is reached, tensile strength playing no essential role except, perhaps, at the slab edges. At the edge, restraint is provided by: (i) the piles themselves reacting against the fill above the footing and in bending; (ii) the surrounding brickwork, supported in its turn by the external ground; (iii) the stiffness provided by the edge strip of the slab between the last row of piles and the wall: here the slab is acting as a deep beam spanning horizontally between piles. Verulam Verulam

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