UAE | Housing & Property
Move to protect buildings from underground cavities
The Al Ain Municipality has issued guidelines for construction activities in areas that are known to have underground holes.
Al Ain: The Al Ain Municipality has issued guidelines for construction activities in areas that are known to have underground holes.
The decision follows reports of incidences of damage to properties.
The guidelines have been recommended by a team of scientists and municipality engineers and UAE University (UAEU) based on the ongoing geological study aimed at creating a knowledge-base on the nature of land.
A 17-member team, led by Rowda Al Sa'adi, has been working to tackle the problem that has affected several projects in Al Ain city and the Shahama area of Abu Dhabi.
Rowda and Professor Hayder Aziz Bakr, a faculty member at the Geology Department of the UAEU, on Sunday told the participants of a workshop that underground cavities are a threat to construction projects and need to be tackled through proper geological surveys.
The briefing was attended by Awad Khalifa Hasoom Al Drmaki, General Manager of Al Ain Municipality, managers of municipality departments and representatives of construction companies. Prof Bakr said the existing method of geotechnical drills is not effective in tracing subsurface objects and cavities.
"The area has precious archaeological remains, Falajs [ancient underground water channels], and potentially dangerous cavities," he said.
The geological study project has various techniques to locate subsurface objects with precision, he said.
"The project objective is to study the layers beneath the surface to a depth of 40 metres in Al Ain city and its suburbs," he said.
He cited three case studies, saying geotechnical drillings had failed to find underground cavities in those projects. Cavities were later accidentally found there resulting in the stoppage of work.
Stopped
He said a subsurface cavity was found at the site of Shaikha Salama Mosque in downtown Al Ain. The work was stopped on the project and methods were being developed to tackle the problem.
Rowda said future social and economic plans for Al Ain city points to a period of boom in construction.
"This requires taking into consideration all the necessary measures to ensure the safety of people and structures," she said.
The top priority is therefore the understanding of the geological and structural nature of the ground.
The existence of cavities of various sizes near the surface is known, said Rowda, noting that these cavities and Falajs have caused damages to property.
She said without a proper geophysical survey the dangers to the structures are difficult to identify.
Hole: Danger to lives
A subsurface cavity is a hole beneath the surface that cannot be detected under normal conditions from above.
They develop due to geological or human-induced causes. Cavities are considered a dangerous threat to a building, roads or any structure built on such land. They result in subsidence (caving in or collapsing) causing minor to great damage to the property and civic infrastructure and human lives.
Share this article
More from UAE Housing & Property
More from UAE
Popular in UAE

-
Your pictures
Readers' pictures
The best reader pictures from around the UAE this week
Latest news
- Dubai Airshow: Change in Emirates check-in time
- Dance group brings taste of Korean culture to Abu Dhabi
- EAD studies focus on water security
- Dubai Press Club marks 10th anniversary
- Visitors flock to see latest offerings at Sharjah book fair
- UAE combats human trafficking
- Ministry denies hijacking of UAE-flagged ship
- Saif meets special needs centre users
- Man says he repaid 95% of amount he embezzled
- Dubai saleswoman claims she was duped, raped
- Female clerk, waiter deny drug trafficking charges
- Live hoardings: Ad a glance
- Gem of a woman
- Dewa charges: It's a bitter bill
- Weighty matter: Zap those fat cells
UAE Editor's choice
-
Interactive Quiz: Fish of the World
Test your knowledge of the deep by taking our aquatic quiz
-
The world's tallest tower in 24 hours
Changing face of world's tallest tower Burj Dubai from dawn till dusk
-
Yoga under a full moon
Some classic yoga postures that are perfect to perform when the moon is full.


