Fugro performs Monaco’s first O-Cell® pile tests for L’Anse Du Portier eco-project
Published
22 Jun 2020
Location
Paris, France
Fugro has completed an 11-month land site characterisation project for the Sogefon/Fondamenta joint venture as part of Monaco’s prestigious L’Anse du Portier (Portier Cove) land extension project.
Fugro supported the foundation design phase by performing three Osterberg cell® (O-Cell®) pile tests, a first in Monaco, to acquire a comprehensive understanding of the new site’s substrata resistance, on which a ‘forest’ of more than 1000 piles will be installed.
L’Anse du Portier is a land extension of Monaco’s existing coastline and will create a new 6-hectare eco-district around the Grimaldi Forum exhibition centre. The complex onsite geology requires foundation piles with a diameter of up to 1.8 m and 60 m long to reach solid ground. To verify the pile design, Fugro utilised the O-Cell® method as the best option for the land extension’s geology and configuration, and the demanding project schedule. The average friction test result was around 30 % higher than the friction value considered during the initial design phase, which will enable Sogefon/Fondamenta to optimise their pile design for construction and achieve significant cost savings.
Leonardo Pedrazzi, deputy administrator of Sogefon, said: “Fugro’s O-Cell® test results provided vital parameters that allowed us to fully characterise the geotechnical conditions of the site’s three foundation zones. The Geo-data acquired have optimised our pile design ready for the installation phase.”
Michel Maron, geotechnical engineer for Fugro, said: “Interpretation of the three test piles clearly demonstrated the value of O-Cell® testing and enabled Sogefon/Fondamenta to correlate results from the friction and tip resistance tests performed onsite for much more accurate ground insights.”
Contact us
Get in touch for
Serge van de Ven
Director Corporate Communications
Catrien van Buttingha Wichers
Director Investor Relations
Our mission
Creating a safe and liveable world
Tackling tomorrow’s problems