A CASE STUDY OF THE BEHAVIOUR OF A VERTICAL SEAWALL
THIAM-SOON TAN , POH-LING LEONG , KWET-YEW YoNG ,
RYUJI KAMATA , JOHN WEI , KENG-CHAY CHUA and YAN-HUI LOH
ABSTRACT : Reclamation is a major construction activity in
Singapore, and this often entails the construction of a vertical sea-
wall to contain the reclamation. In Singapore a frequently used
technique is the use of L-Blocks. However, there are concerns about the
movement and tilt of such relatively light blocks. An ongoing
reclamation in the northeast of Singapore makes use of nearly 5.6 km of
such wall. As a requirement, prior to commencement of construction, a
finite element study was carried out to analyze the possible movement
and tilting of the blocks as well as the long-term settlement of the
seabed. Instrumentation clusters were then installed to provide valuable
data to validate the accuracy of the design and also allow lessons to be
learned from the difference between prediction and measurement. This
paper is a report of the comparison between prediction and performance
that was carried out at this site. As is the case in many actual
constructions projects, the effect of certain activities unanticipated
in the design caused the measured value to differ significantly from
prediction. When these are factored out, it is evident that the finite
element analysis can produce reasonable trend, though not the magnitude.
However, the results thus far suggest that two simple steps can greatly
improve performance, namely a more accurate soil profiling and
accounting for the higher stiffness of stiffer strata due to
non-linearity at small strain.
Key words: case history, finite element method, land
reclamation, seawall, settlement (IGC: E2/H7)
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