The Civil Engineering Contractor October 2018 | Page 33

INSIGHT piling as an example, if there is a dry stable profile with rock relatively shallow, one can drill the piles in an open hole, clean the base of the pile, place the steel, and cast the concrete; it’s quick, it’s easy, it’s cheap. But if a piling contractor hits a water table at a certain point, particularly within weak soil, the sides of the hole may collapse with water ingress. This can then have a massive impact on the cost of the piling. Contractors therefore need as much information as possible. “During the course of our work, we get to review and utilise reports from many different companies, engineers, and engineering geologists. While there is a lot of excellent work being produced, there is also, to be frank, some complete rubbish,” says Green. One problem with geotechnical reports is that there are limited legal requirements for them, with the exception of very specific statutory requirements governing work involving dolomite because of the risk of sinkholes forming underground, and the NHBRC which reviews geotechnical investigation reports on residential developments. “In the case of geotechnical investigation work for commercial or industrial development, while sometimes a bank will insist upon a geotechnical report and sometimes a structural engineer will insist upon one to have a basis for their design, there is otherwise no legal requirement.” He cites major commercial developments in Gauteng where large basements were being constructed and the geotechnical reports were under- specified and did not even extend to the level of the bottom of the basement. One such project had issues with the founding of the structure, as they were expecting rock at the base of the excavation, which did not turn out to be the case. “By the time you’re there and have to change everything, it causes delays. A two-month delay on a project with a R200  000/day penalty gets expensive very quickly, and these seem to just get absorbed in the development cost as it proceeds and not much spoken of. Physical collapses or disasters are actually fairly rare because contractors and engineers are used to monitoring and adapting “Because of this issue of the sometimes poor quality of geotechnical reports, the SAICE Geotechnical Division has been trying to improve the situation. To this end, we published a Code of Practice on site investigations in 2010." as they go along. Financial disasters, I suspect, are far more common.” “It is brushed under the carpet, but I sometimes think it would be better for the industry if these issues were more transparent.” He says this in his role as a voluntary member of the South African Institute of Civil Engineering (SAICE), where he used to head the geotechnical division and remains actively involved. “Because of this issue of the sometimes poor quality of geotechnical reports, the SAICE Geotechnical Division has been trying to improve the situation. To this end, we published a Code of Practice on site investigations in 2010. That is not a statutory requirement, and nobody enforces that you use it, but at least it is a reference document that can be used to say that ‘this is the minimum requirement for an investigation’. You would be surprised how often even the basics are ignored. For example, you should