PS When sheet piling or retaining wall is required I always did this before any other civil work in the area. Puzzling to me is the house or building right behind the pool. Seems like the piling would have been required for it as well unless it's very old and there's been a lot of erosion.*** Edited this since I just realized you are the involved in performing the work***
BB,
Hard for me to tell from the photo but this doesn't look to me that it's just tidal water. King tides happen all the time and should not cause this. Any chance you got one of those random downpours that filled this hole up? This will happen any time you have a hard downpour even with well points but should quickly pump down. I'd take a look at the design basis and geotech work that should have been used by the engineer to do the structural design. Is there a note of some kind that indicates a retaining wall if required is outside the scope of his design? Pools on the water edge almost always require this but not always. Depends entirely on what's below the surface rock or mud. I've done sheet piling in S Louisiana for shore bases where the crane had to hold on to each piece of piling or it would drop like a rock and could never be found. Sometimes this would happen up to the first 3 sections! No matter what we did I'd have to come back every 5 or 6 years to repair it. Other places it was hard to even dig without some blasting.
Looks from the photo the floor elevation of the garage behind the pool is similar to the pool. What's the river? If it's a navigable waterway the Corps of Engineers would likely have some jurisdiction/requirements and I'm quite certain your engineer that stamped the drawing would be aware of this. Can you get a copy of the stamped design drawing(s)? That should shed a lot of light on this. What is your role on this project, GC or sub and if so what sub?
I hope this helps.
Chris
Sink, no pun intendedI would not even try to build a pool on the property. If (really when) it fails like the pic shared above YOUR name will be connected to it. I would not want that to happen as it could sink your good name![]()
Answering both of your posts in 1 reply.PS When sheet piling or retaining wall is required I always did this before any other civil work in the area. Puzzling to me is the house or building right behind the pool. Seems like the piling would have been required for it as well unless it's very old and there's been a lot of erosion.
Had the long conversation with the homeowner yesterday.Thanks for the update. You're in a tough spot. I'd be interested in how forward looking the engineering design of the pool is (to say nothing of the house) considering the direction that ocean levels are going. If I owned that property (I could have but we chose to buy higher soundfront land) I'd spend my $100-150K raising the house up 9' and sleeping well at night, and putting in at least an oyster sill/marsh/riprap (or some combo) shoreline. Not sure if a fiberglass sheet pile seawall would be a great solution to allow a pool (though it would certainly stop erosion) since it's going to be overtopped (or flooded around the side) anyway since the native elevation isn't sufficient to remain dry in a well lined-up hurricane scenario. We are having this conversation about a tide level that occur numerous times each year! Seems like they are only adding to their worries by building a pool.
I know it's not your call, but the homeowner should have the foresight to "look around". Some lots (many actually) aren't long for staying dry, and aren't well-reasoned lots to build pools or ground level homes on. A rising tide may lift all boats, but it also lifts (and destroys) a lot of "permanent" things that are built at lower elevations than they should be.
Sorry for the delay again. I was out all week for unplanned business.Answering both of your posts in 1 reply.
I am GC on the project, owner of the pool company.
Water way is a sound leading to the ocean.
Yes, I am shocked that a sea wall is not required here.
What isn't shown in the picture is the water was nearly above the road...
This was all from king tides, no rain in the past few days.
Apparently this king tide is about 3.5' higher than normal high tide.
After more discussions with multiple engineers:
The only viable solution is piles every 6' on center.
12" slab pour for the base with #5 @ 12" OC double mat.
The work would have to be started and completed in between king tides.
That's just so the pool doesn't float away. We haven't discussed what work is necessary to make an elevated deck remain put.
Honestly seems like the bottom floor of this house could be under water if the sea level rises 1-2' on a king tide.
Never seen anything like it.