TheRifleman
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Joe Montana joins the band of litigants.
http://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Joe-Montana-sues-SF-s-Millennium-Tower-11131266.php
You can't win them all JOE.
Joe Montana joins the band of litigants.
http://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Joe-Montana-sues-SF-s-Millennium-Tower-11131266.php
The tower is now leaning 14 inches at the roofline, an increase of two+ inches in six months. Overall sinking is now 17 inches, and continuing with no letup.
Consulting engineers, including DeSimone the original structural engineer, are proposing a fix by drilling piles to bedrock. Perhaps up to a 100 piles. Cost of $100-150 million.
http://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/...r-keeps-on-sinking-but-there-may-11297935.php
Supposedly, the new piles would correct the tilt, but how this would occur is not explained.
I am willing to bet that they are going to spend the $75million it would take to underpin this. I almost guarantee it. Because if they don't, they'll spend at least as much on drawn out legal expenses/etc.
... This sort of scheme (below) with tension/compression pile pairs, both anchored to bedrock, with cantilevered needle beams might work. (obv. this picture doesn't exactly reflect this reality...SF MT is on a big mat slab IIRC...but the concept is the same).
17 inches seems like a lot but I guess not that dangerous. At what tilt would the building considered to be in a dangerous situation?
Source: Tilting Millennium Tower Could Cost Taxpayers Millions | NBC Bay Area http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/loca...xpayers-Millions-390248251.html#ixzz4nPOwccP3It’s the tower’s leaning, according to experts, that could spell disaster for the luxury high rise.
“If they get too far off center,” former San Francisco assistant fire chief Frank Blackburn warned, “the elevators won’t work or they’ll jam.”
Blackburn, formerly director of the city’s earthquake preparedness effort, that could mean “people couldn’t get out – it’s a serious problem in my opinion.”
Source: Tilting Millennium Tower Could Cost Taxpayers Millions | NBC Bay Area http://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/loca...xpayers-Millions-390248251.html#ixzz4nPOwccP3
Sounds like being in a deathtrap if an earthquake happens.
Why doesn't most developments of this magnitude require the developer to hit bedrock for the foundations?
There was / is no code requirement in Boston that required MT to go to bedrock; MT Boston used the same structural engineer and very similar foundation for a concrete tall.
I am confused - everything I have read has said MT Boston did go to bedrock.
Anyone want to do the trigonometry? If the mat is down six inches, what's the lateral displacement at the top of the building?
Current measurements show an out-of-plumbness at the top of facade of about 14 inches to the west and 6 inches to the north. This is twice what would be considered an acceptable construction tolerance for out-of-plumb.
IIRC, the article said the building is leaning 14" off center.
Edit: From the report:
>>> Translation: "please do not cite us at a future date implying we did an extensive analysis and said everything was OK"Because of the unexpected and excessive settlement and building tilt, and the lack of stabilization of the settlements, the building warrants in-depth investigation.
>>> Translation: "a gazillion dollars may need to be spent on this...but do not accuse us of either saying it needs to be spent / or not needs to be spent in this report"...because the structure is still settling, continued monitoring and further study of the cause of the settlements is recommended to allow a better understanding of maximum future settlements. Once it has been confirmed that the settlement rate will reduce and estimates of maximum long-term settlement and lean are available, reevaluation of the acceptability of the structural performance of the building is recommended.