Affiliation:
1. Associate director at Arup
2. Project manager at HBG Construction London
Abstract
Construction of a new 20 m deep commercial building basement in the centre of London involved what is believed to be the first true application of the ‘observational method’ on a major building project. Use of the ground movement monitoring technique, previously confined to civil engineering projects, allowed the top-down construction sequence on this confined urban site to miss a floor. This made it easier to remove the large concrete base of an existing basement and cut 20 weeks off the construction programme. All observed ground movements were within preset limits, so contingency measures were not needed, resulting in a highly cost-effective solution that could have wide application in the building sector.
Subject
Civil and Structural Engineering
Cited by
9 articles.
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1. Observational method;ICE Manual of Geotechnical Engineering, Second edition, Volume II;2023-01
2. Slope Stabilization of Twin-Tubes Tunnel Portal by Anchor Bolts Support System;Romanian Journal of Transport Infrastructure;2022-12-01
3. Design adaptations in a large and deep urban excavation: Case study;Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering;2019-04
4. Lessons learnt from a deep excavation for future application of the observational method;Journal of Rock Mechanics and Geotechnical Engineering;2018-06
5. Reliability aspects of rock tunnel design with the observational method;International Journal of Rock Mechanics and Mining Sciences;2017-10