Section 8.0 Foundation Analysis 1960050-03
. 8.0 FOUNDATION ANALYSIS
Although stabilization of the landslide is not an authorized purpose for this feasibility study,
protection of the toe of the landslide against continued erosion is an authorized purpose.
The stabilization concept for the active landslide by the City of Rancho Palos Verdes includes
construction of a gravity buttress or toe berm at the present shoreline. A stone revetment in
shallow water would protect the toe berm from wave erosion (Figure 27). The gravity buttress
would consist of a mass of earth placed where the landslide rupture surface is inclined to the
north or is nearly horizontal. This mass of earth would act as a counterweight and increase the
forces resisting landslide movement. Construction of the gravity buttress would require the
placement of a large yolume of compacted fill. The fill would be derived from the redistribution
of landslide debris from within the active landslide. This method has the potential benefit of
reducing driving forces within the landward subslides and thereby increasing their stability by
removing debris inland at the same time as the resisting forces in the seaward subslide are
increased by placement of the buttress fill. As shown in the cross sections (Figures 13, 14, and
15), the geometry of the landslide rupture surface requires that such a gravity buttress would be
placed offshore of the existing shoreline.
The specific location of the toe berm would be determined at a later date, following site specific
studies. However, it is assumed that, for ease of construction, the buttress would be constructed
in the shallowest water possible. As shown on Figure 27, the toe berm or buttress would be
located very near the shoreline. The berm would be approximately 150 feet offshore at its
farthest point from the beach, located about 450 to 1,000 feet east of Inspiration Point.
At this area the buttress would be founded on the seafloor bottom between -4 and -20 feet. A
rock revetment would be used to protect the earthen buttress from wave erosion. Conceptual
designs for the rock revetment have been discussed by Bailey (1986), USACE (1992), and Ehlig
and Yen (1997). These designs generally consist of rock placed on the seaward facing side of the
buttress to dissipate the wave energy. Preliminary designs for Portuguese Bend indicate that the
revetment would be founded on bedrock about 4 feet below MLLW. The revetment would
extend approximately 2,000 feet along the shoreline, and be located about 150 feet offshore.
Existing Foundation Sites for Shore Protection
The proposed revetment would be located approximately 150 feet offshore and extends from
Inspiration Point 2,000 feet to the east. Placement of the revetment in this area allows the toe
berm to be located seaward of the toe of the landslide and, in the area west of Portuguese
Canyon, seaward of the inactive ancient landslide debris. Within this area water depths vary to a
maximum of about 25 feet (Dill and Norall, 1995). Within the area proposed for the revetment
foundation, unconsolidated Holocene age sediment appears to vary from approximately 5 to
410
about 8 feet in thickness (Dill and Norall, 1995).
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LEIGHTONANOASSOCIATES,INC.
1960050-03
The proposed location for the revetment is seaward of the toe of the active landslide, on the11,
bedrock seafloor bottom. Based on the three recent drill holes at the beach, the revetment would
be located on bedrock dipping seaward at 10 to 15 degrees. The seafloor bottom slopes to the
south at approximately 2 to 3 degrees in this area. Therefore, the bedrock should dip more
steeply than the seafloor topography and a daylighted bedding. condition should be avoided.
Although a basalt bedrock foundation would be the best alternative for location of the revetment,
a continuous basalt outcrop may not extend eastward from Inspiration Point to the beach at the
east side of the study area. Basalt has been mapped on the seafloor adjacent to Inspiration Point
and at the beach approximately 2,700 feet east of the point. Additional drilling, in the offshore
environment, would be necessary to demonstrate continuity beneath the Holocene sediments.
The sedimentary bedrock of the Monterey Formation, however, should be suitable as a
foundation material for the revetment.
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LEIGHTON AND ASSOCIATES,INC.