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Capital Gate

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Capital Gate , also known as the Leaning Tower of Abu Dhabi , is a skyscraper in Abu Dhabi that is over 160 meters (520 ft) tall, 35 stories high, with over 16,000 square meters (170,000 sq ft) of usable office space. Capital Gate is one of the tallest buildings in the city and was designed to incline 18° west, more than four times the lean of the Leaning Tower of Pisa . The building is owned and was developed by the Abu Dhabi National Exhibitions Company . The tower is the focal point of Capital Centre.

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91-500: The structure rests on a foundation of 490 pilings that have been drilled 30 meters (98 ft) below ground. The deep pilings provide stability against strong winds, gravitational pull, and seismic pressures that arise due to the incline of the building. Of the 490 pilings, 287 are 1 meter (3 ft 3 in) in diameter and 20 to 30 meters (66 to 98 ft) deep, and 203 are 60 centimeters (24 in) in diameter and 20 meters (66 ft) deep. All 490 piles are capped together using

182-425: A cell within a whole organ intact and under perfusion may be in situ investigation. This would not be in vivo as the donor is sacrificed by experimentation, but it would not be the same as working with the cell alone (a common scenario for in vitro experiments). For instance, an example of biomedical engineering in situ involves the procedures to directly create an implant from a patient's own tissue within

273-402: A continuous flight augering (CFA) pile, is formed by drilling into the ground with a hollow stemmed continuous flight auger to the required depth or degree of resistance. No casing is required. A cement grout mix is then pumped down the stem of the auger. While the cement grout is pumped, the auger is slowly withdrawn, conveying the soil upward along the flights. A shaft of fluid cement grout

364-402: A Continuous Flight Auger rig but using smaller, more lightweight equipment. This piling method is fast, cost-effective and suitable for the majority of ground types. In drilled pier foundations, the piers can be connected with grade beams on which the structure sits, sometimes with heavy column loads bearing directly on the piers. In some residential construction, the piers are extended above

455-430: A continuous barrier in the ground. The main application of sheet piles is in retaining walls and cofferdams erected to enable permanent works to proceed. Normally, vibrating hammer, t-crane and crawle drilling are used to establish sheet piles. Soldier piles, also known as king piles or Berlin walls, are constructed of steel H sections spaced about 2 to 3 m apart and are driven or drilled prior to excavation. As

546-446: A crucial determinant for treatment protocols and prognostic assessment. Space exploration utilizes in situ planetary research methods, conducting direct observational studies and data collection on celestial bodies , thereby avoiding the complexities inherent in sample-return missions . The humanities , notably archaeology , employ in situ methodologies to maintain contextual authenticity. Archaeological investigations preserve

637-501: A densely reinforced concrete mat footing nearly 2 meters (6.6 ft) deep. Some of the piles were only initially compressed during construction to support the lower floors of the building. Now they are in tension as additional stress caused by the overhang has been applied. The core of the Capital Gate was built using jumping formwork, also known as climbing formwork . The center concrete core had to be specially designed to account for

728-417: A displacement pile (like Olivier piles ) may provide the cost efficiency of an augercast pile and minimal environmental impact. In ground containing obstructions or cobbles and boulders, augercast piles are less suitable as refusal above the design pile tip elevation may be encountered. Small Sectional Flight Auger piling rigs can also be used for piled raft foundations. These produce the same type of pile as

819-420: A failure of the foundation system. Vibrated stone columns are a ground improvement technique where columns of coarse aggregate are placed in soils with poor drainage or bearing capacity to improve the soils. Specific to marine structures, hospital piles (also known as gallow piles) are built to provide temporary support to marine structure components during refurbishment works. For example, when removing

910-461: A field setting as opposed to a laboratory setting. In gastronomy , "in situ" refers to the art of cooking with the different resources that are available at the site of the event. Here a person is not going to the restaurant, but the restaurant comes to the person's home. In legal contexts, in situ is often used for its literal meaning. For example, in Hong Kong , in-situ land exchange refers to

1001-412: A large hollow steel pile, of some 4 m in diameter with approximately 50mm thick walls, some 25 m deep into the seabed, through a 0.5 m layer of larger stone and gravel to minimize erosion around the pile. A transition piece (complete with pre-installed features such as boat-landing arrangement, cathodic protection , cable ducts for sub-marine cables, turbine tower flange, etc.) is attached to

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1092-509: A long time below the groundwater level. In 1648, the Royal Palace of Amsterdam was constructed on 13,659 timber piles that still survive today since they were below groundwater level. Timber that is to be used above the water table can be protected from decay and insects by numerous forms of wood preservation using pressure treatment ( alkaline copper quaternary (ACQ), chromated copper arsenate (CCA), creosote , etc.). Splicing timber piles

1183-402: A mechanism where landowners can swap their existing or expired leases with new grants for the same land parcel. This approach facilitates redevelopment while preserving the property's original location. In the field of recognition of governments under public international law the term in situ is used to distinguish between an exiled government and a government with effective control over

1274-1092: A methodological framework that emphasizes the relationship between artistic works and their environmental or cultural settings. In aerospace structural health monitoring , in situ inspection denotes diagnostic methodologies that evaluate components within their operational environments—eliminating the need for disassembly or service interruption. The nondestructive testing (NDT) techniques employed for in situ damage detection include: infrared thermography , which measures thermal emissions to identify structural anomalies; speckle shearing interferometry (also known as shearography ), which analyzes surface deformation patterns; and ultrasonic testing , which uses sound wave propagation to detect internal defects in composite materials . Each technique exhibits characteristic operational constraints. Infrared thermography exhibits reduced effectiveness on low- emissivity materials, shearography requires carefully controlled environmental conditions, and ultrasonic testing protocols can be time-intensive for large structural components. Nevertheless,

1365-410: A physical storage facility such as hay. In electrochemistry , the phrase in situ refers to performing electrochemical experiments under operating conditions of the electrochemical cell, i.e., under potential control. This is opposed to doing ex situ experiments that are performed under the absence of potential control. Potential control preserves the electrochemical environment essential to maintain

1456-531: A presenter looking at tips on a smart glass to reduce their speaking rate during a speech, or technicians receiving online and stepwise instructions for repairing an engine. An algorithm is said to be an in situ algorithm, or in-place algorithm , if the extra amount of memory required to execute the algorithm is O(1) , that is, does not exceed a constant no matter how large the input. Typically such an algorithm operates on data objects directly in place rather than making copies of them. For example, heapsort

1547-439: A project site. In this case, it is used to designate the state of an unmodified sample taken from a given stockpile. Site construction usually involves grading the existing soil surface so that material is "cut" out of one area and "filled" in another area creating a flat pad on an existing slope. The term "in situ" distinguishes soil still in its existing condition from soil modified (filled) during construction. The differences in

1638-615: A river pontoon, the brow will be attached to hospital pile to support it. They are normal piles, usually with a chain or hook attachment. Piled walls can be drivene or bored. They provide special advantages where available working space dictates and open cut excavation not feasible. Both methods offer technically effective and offer a cost efficient temporary or permanent means of retaining the sides of bulk excavations even in water bearing strata. When used in permanent works, these walls can be designed to resist vertical loads in addition lateral load from retaining soil. Construction of both methods

1729-453: A straight-shaft pile. These piles are suited for expansive soils which are often subjected to seasonal moisture variations, or for loose or soft strata. They are used in normal ground condition also where economics are favorable. Under reamed piles foundation is used for the following soils:- 1. Under reamed piles are used in black cotton soil: This type of soil expands when it comes in contact with water and contraction occurs when water

1820-462: A tripod rig to install piles is one of the more traditional ways of forming piles. Although unit costs are generally higher than with most other forms of piling, it has several advantages which have ensured its continued use through to the present day. The tripod system is easy and inexpensive to bring to site, making it ideal for jobs with a small number of piles. Sheet piling is a form of driven piling using thin interlocking sheets of steel to obtain

1911-484: A type of malignant skin cancer . In this stage, the cancerous melanocytes —the pigment-producing cells that give skin its color—are confined to the epidermis , the outermost layer of the skin . The melanoma has not yet penetrated into the deeper dermal layers of the skin or metastasized to other parts of the body. Beyond oncology, in situ applies to fields that require maintenance of natural anatomical or physiological positions. In orthopedic surgery , for example,

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2002-467: A versatile platform for storage and release of therapeutic proteins. It has tremendous applications for cancer treatment, vaccination, diagnosis, regenerative medicine, and therapies for loss-of-function genetic diseases. In chemical engineering, in situ often refers to industrial plant "operations or procedures that are performed in place." For example, aged catalysts in industrial reactors may be regenerated in place ( in situ ) without being removed from

2093-959: Is a Latin phrase meaning "in place" or "on site", derived from in ("in") and situ ( ablative of situs , "place"). The term refers to the examination or preservation of phenomena within their original place or context. This methodological approach, used across diverse disciplines, maintains contextual integrity essential for accurate analysis. Conversely, ex situ methods examine subjects outside their original context. The natural sciences frequently implement in situ methodologies. Geological studies employ field analysis of soil composition and rock formations , while environmental science relies on direct ecosystem monitoring to obtain accurate environmental data. Biological field research examines organisms in their natural habitats , revealing behavioral patterns and ecological interactions that laboratory settings cannot replicate. In chemistry and experimental physics , in situ techniques enable

2184-496: Is a barrier built under ground using a mix of bentonite and water to prevent the flow of groundwater. A trench that would collapse due to the hydraulic pressure in the surrounding soil does not collapse as the slurry balances the hydraulic pressure. These are essentially variations of in situ reinforcements in the form of piles (as mentioned above), blocks or larger volumes. Cement, lime/quick lime, flyash, sludge and/or other binders (sometimes called stabilizer) are mixed into

2275-412: Is also not possible to extend the wall beyond the bottom of the excavation, and dewatering is often required. Screw piles , also called helical piers and screw foundations , have been used as foundations since the mid 19th century in screw-pile lighthouses . Screw piles are galvanized iron pipe with helical fins that are turned into the ground by machines to the required depth. The screw distributes

2366-409: Is an in situ sorting algorithm, which sorts the elements of an array in place. Quicksort is an in situ sorting algorithm, but in the worst case it requires linear space on the call stack (this can be reduced to log space). Merge sort is generally not written as an in situ algorithm. AJAX partial page data updates is another example of in situ in a Web UI/UX context. Web 2.0 included AJAX and

2457-459: Is based on the direction in which the tower leans. The external grid carries the weight of the floor while the internal diagrid connects with the external and transfers the load to the core, thereby eliminating the need for columns in the floor. In June 2010, Guinness World Records recognized Capital Gate tower as the world's "farthest manmade leaning building". The new record shows that the Capital Gate tower has been built to lean 18° west, which

2548-413: Is commonly applied in the context of carcinoma in situ (CIS), a term describing abnormal cells confined to their original location without invasion of surrounding tissue. CIS is a critical term in early cancer diagnosis , as it signifies a non-invasive stage, allowing for more targeted interventions before potential progression. Similarly, melanoma in situ is an early, localized form of melanoma ,

2639-463: Is formed to ground level. Reinforcement can be installed. Recent innovations in addition to stringent quality control allows reinforcing cages to be placed up to the full length of a pile when required. Augercast piles cause minimal disturbance and are often used for noise-sensitive and environmentally-sensitive sites. Augercast piles are not generally suited for use in contaminated soils, because of expensive waste disposal costs. In cases such as these,

2730-537: Is more than four times that of the Leaning Tower of Suurhusen . The Guinness World Records recognition was given by a Guinness-appointed awards committee in January 2010, when the exterior was completed. The building has a diagrid specially designed to absorb and channel the forces created by wind and seismic loading , as well as the gradient of Capital Gate. Capital Gate is one of only a handful of diagrid buildings in

2821-421: Is not in situ (see wh-movement ): "What did John buy?" In literature in situ is used to describe a condition. The Rosetta Stone , for example, was originally erected in a courtyard, for public viewing. Most pictures of the famous stone are not in situ pictures of it erected, as it would have been originally. The stone was uncovered as part of building material, within a wall. Its in situ condition today

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2912-414: Is often used when the sides of the borehole are likely to slough off before concrete is poured. For end-bearing piles, drilling continues until the borehole has extended a sufficient depth (socketing) into a sufficiently strong layer. Depending on site geology, this can be a rock layer , or hardpan, or other dense, strong layers. Both the diameter of the pile and the depth of the pile are highly specific to

3003-426: Is removed. So that cracks appear in the construction done on such clay. An under reamed pile is used in the base to remove this defect. 2. Under reamed piles are used in low bearing capacity Outdated soil (filled soil) 3.Under reamed piles are used in sandy soil when water table is high. 4. Under reamed piles are used, Where lifting forces appear at the base of foundation. An augercast pile, often known as

3094-422: Is simply there to ensure that the two pieces follow each other during driving. If uplift capacity is required, the splice can incorporate bolts, coach screws, spikes or the like to give it the necessary capacity. Cast iron may be used for piling. These may be ductile . Pipe piles are a type of steel driven pile foundation and are a good candidate for inclined ( battered ) piles. In situ In situ

3185-426: Is still quite common and is the easiest of all the piling materials to splice. The normal method for splicing is by driving the leader pile first, driving a steel tube (normally 60–100 cm long, with an internal diameter no smaller than the minimum toe diameter) half its length onto the end of the leader pile. The follower pile is then simply slotted into the other end of the tube and driving continues. The steel tube

3276-617: Is that it is erected, vertically, on public display at the British Museum in London, England. The term in situ in the medical context is part of a group of two-word Latin expressions, including in vitro , in vivo , and ex vivo . Similar to abbreviations, these terms support the concise transfer of essential information in medical communication. In situ , specifically, is among the most widely used and versatile Latin terms in medical discourse in modern times. In oncology , in situ

3367-409: Is the same as for foundation bearing piles. Contiguous walls are constructed with small gaps between adjacent piles. The spacing of the piles can be varied to provide suitable bending stiffness. Secant pile walls are constructed such that space is left between alternate 'female' piles for the subsequent construction of 'male' piles. Construction of 'male' piles involves boring through the concrete in

3458-595: The Earth sciences , in situ typically describes natural material or processes prior to transport. For example, in situ is used in relation to the distinction between weathering and erosion , the difference being that erosion requires a transport medium (such as wind , ice , or water ), whereas weathering occurs in situ . Geochemical processes are also often described as occurring to material in situ . In oceanography and ocean sciences , in situ generally refers to observational methods made by obtaining direct samples of

3549-610: The Horns Rev wind farm in the North Sea west of Denmark utilizes 80 large monopiles of 4 metres diameter sunk 25 meters deep into the seabed, while the Lynn and Inner Dowsing Wind Farm off the coast of England went online in 2008 with over 100 turbines, each mounted on a 4.7-metre-diameter monopile foundation in ocean depths up to 18 metres. The typical construction process for a wind turbine subsea monopile foundation in sand includes driving

3640-507: The in place storage of a product, usually a natural resource. More generally, it refers to any situation where there is no out-of-pocket cost to store the product so that the only storage cost is the opportunity cost of waiting longer to get your money when the product is eventually sold. Examples of in situ storage would be oil and gas wells, all types of mineral and gem mines, stone quarries, timber that has reached an age where it could be harvested, and agricultural products that do not need

3731-646: The 'female' piles hole in order to key 'male' piles between. The male pile is the one where steel reinforcement cages are installed, though in some cases the female piles are also reinforced. Secant piled walls can either be true hard/hard, hard/intermediate (firm), or hard/soft, depending on design requirements. Hard refers to structural concrete and firm or soft is usually a weaker grout mix containing bentonite. All types of wall can be constructed as free standing cantilevers , or may be propped if space and sub-structure design permit. Where party wall agreements allow, ground anchors can be used as tie backs. A slurry wall

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3822-509: The binders and refilling them in the desired area. The technique can also be used on lightly contaminated masses as a means of binding contaminants, as opposed to excavating them and transporting to landfill or processing. As the name implies, timber piles are made of wood . Historically, timber has been a plentiful, locally available resource in many areas. Today, timber piles are still more affordable than concrete or steel. Compared to other types of piles (steel or concrete), and depending on

3913-685: The common reasons are very large design loads, a poor soil at shallow depth, or site constraints like property lines . There are different terms used to describe different types of deep foundations including the pile (which is analogous to a pole), the pier (which is analogous to a column ), drilled shafts, and caissons . Piles are generally driven into the ground in situ ; other deep foundations are typically put in place using excavation and drilling. The naming conventions may vary between engineering disciplines and firms. Deep foundations can be made out of timber , steel , reinforced concrete or prestressed concrete . Prefabricated piles are driven into

4004-441: The computation to where data is located, rather than the other way like in traditional RDBMS systems where data is moved to computational space. This is also known as in-situ processing . In design and advertising the term typically means the superimposing of theoretical design elements onto photographs of real world locations. This is a pre-visualization tool to aid in illustrating a proof of concept. In physical geography and

4095-417: The concept of asynchronous requests to servers to replace a portion of a web page with new data, without reloading the entire page, as the early HTML model dictated. Arguably, all asynchronous data transfers or any background task is in situ as the normal state is normally unaware of background tasks, usually notified on completion by a callback mechanism. With big data , in situ data would mean bringing

4186-461: The confines of the Operating Room . In vitro was among the first attempts to qualitatively and quantitatively analyze natural occurrences in the lab. Eventually, the limitation of in vitro experimentation was that they were not conducted in natural environments. To compensate for this problem, in vivo experimentation allowed testing to occur in the original organism or environment. To bridge

4277-454: The core and slowly straightened it out. The core contains 146 vertical steel tendons, each 20 meters (66 ft) long, which are used for post-tension. Given the 18° lean of the building, the construction required two diagrid systems: an external diagrid defining the tower's shape and an internal diagrid linked to the central core by eight unique, pin-jointed structural members. The external diagrid comprises 720 sections of varying shapes, as it

4368-599: The determination of individual identification, causes of death, and other forensic parameters. The concept of in situ in contemporary art emerged as a critical framework during the late 1960s and 1970s, designating artworks conceived and executed for specific spatial contexts. Such works incorporate the site's physical, historical, political, and sociological parameters as integral compositional elements. This methodology stands in contrast to autonomous artistic production, wherein works maintain independence from their eventual display locations. Theoretical discourse regarding

4459-546: The dichotomy of benefits associated with both methodologies, in situ experimentation allowed the controlled aspects of in vitro to become coalesced with the natural environmental compositions of in vivo experimentation. In conservation of genetic resources , " in situ conservation " (also "on-site conservation ") is the process of protecting an endangered plant or animal species in its natural habitat , as opposed to ex situ conservation (also "off-site conservation"). In chemistry, in situ typically means "in

4550-473: The distinct preservation conditions in underwater environments, where diminished oxygen levels and temperature stability facilitate long-term artifact preservation. The extraction of artifacts from these submerged environments and subsequent exposure to atmospheric conditions typically accelerates deterioration processes, most notably in the oxidation of ferrous materials. In archaeological contexts involving burial sites, in situ documentation encompasses

4641-531: The double layer structure intact and the electron transfer reactions occurring at that particular potential in the electrode/electrolyte interphasial region. In situ can refer to where a clean up or remediation of a polluted site is performed using and stimulating the natural processes in the soil , contrary to ex situ where contaminated soil is excavated and cleaned elsewhere, off site. In transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and scanning transmission electron microscopy  (STEM), in situ refers to

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4732-539: The driven depth required was too long for a single pile; today, splicing is common with steel piles, though concrete piles can be spliced with mechanical and other means. Driving piles, as opposed to drilling shafts, is advantageous because the soil displaced by driving the piles compresses the surrounding soil, causing greater friction against the sides of the piles, thus increasing their load-bearing capacity . Driven piles are also considered to be "tested" for weight-bearing ability because of their method of installation; thus

4823-412: The driven pile, and the sand and water are removed from the centre of the pile and replaced with concrete . An additional layer of even larger stone, up to 0.5 m diameter, is applied to the surface of the seabed for longer-term erosion protection. Also called caissons , drilled shafts , drilled piers , cast-in-drilled-hole piles (CIDH piles) or cast-in-situ piles, a borehole is drilled into

4914-408: The earth farther down from the surface than a shallow foundation does to a subsurface layer or a range of depths. A pile or piling is a vertical structural element of a deep foundation, driven or drilled deep into the ground at the building site . There are many reasons that a geotechnical engineer would recommend a deep foundation over a shallow foundation, such as for a skyscraper . Some of

5005-458: The excavation proceeds, horizontal timber sheeting (lagging) is inserted behind the H pile flanges. The horizontal earth pressures are concentrated on the soldier piles because of their relative rigidity compared to the lagging. Soil movement and subsidence is minimized by installing the lagging immediately after excavation to avoid soil loss. Lagging can be constructed by timber, precast concrete, shotcrete and steel plates depending on spacing of

5096-447: The grade beams, while heavier elements bear directly on the pile cap. A monopile foundation utilizes a single, generally large-diameter, foundation structural element to support all the loads (weight, wind, etc.) of a large above-surface structure. A large number of monopile foundations have been utilized in recent years for economically constructing fixed-bottom offshore wind farms in shallow-water subsea locations. For example,

5187-513: The ground conditions, loading conditions, and nature of the project. Pile depths may vary substantially across a project if the bearing layer is not level. Drilled piles can be tested using a variety of methods to verify the pile integrity during installation. Under-reamed piles have mechanically formed enlarged bases that are as much as 6 m in diameter. The form is that of an inverted cone and can only be formed in stable soils or rocks. The larger base diameter allows greater bearing capacity than

5278-413: The ground is continuously frozen , adfreeze piles are used as the primary structural foundation method. Adfreeze piles derive their strength from the bond of the frozen ground around them to the surface of the pile. Adfreeze pile foundations are particularly sensitive in conditions which cause the permafrost to melt. If a building is constructed improperly then it can melt the ground below, resulting in

5369-432: The ground level, and wood beams bearing on the piers are used to support the structure. This type of foundation results in a crawl space underneath the building in which wiring and duct work can be laid during construction or re-modelling. In jet piling high pressure water is used to set piles. High pressure water cuts through soil with a high-pressure jet flow and allows the pile to be fitted. One advantage of Jet Piling:

5460-479: The ground using a pile driver . Driven piles are constructed of wood, reinforced concrete, or steel. Wooden piles are made from the trunks of tall trees. Concrete piles are available in square, octagonal, and round cross-sections (like Franki piles ). They are reinforced with rebar and are often prestressed . Steel piles are either pipe piles or some sort of beam section (like an H-pile). Historically, wood piles used splices to join multiple segments end-to-end when

5551-438: The ground, then concrete (and often some sort of reinforcing) is placed into the borehole to form the pile. Rotary boring techniques allow larger diameter piles than any other piling method and permit pile construction through particularly dense or hard strata. Construction methods depend on the geology of the site; in particular, whether boring is to be undertaken in 'dry' ground conditions or through water-saturated strata. Casing

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5642-442: The height may be as short as half the diameter. Clays and muds are easy to penetrate but provide poor holding capacity, so the height may be as much as eight times the diameter. The open nature of gravel means that water would flow through the ground during installation, causing 'piping' flow (where water boils up through weaker paths through the soil). Therefore, suction piles cannot be used in gravel seabeds. In high latitudes where

5733-452: The immense forces created by the building's angle of elevation, or camber. The core contains 15,000 cubic meters (20,000 cu yd) of concrete reinforced with 10,000 metric tons of steel and uses vertical post-tension and was constructed with a vertical pre-camber. This pre-camber means the core was constructed with a slight opposite lean. As each floor was installed, the weight of the floors and diagonal grid, or diagrid , system pulled

5824-457: The load to the soil and is sized accordingly. Suction piles are used underwater to secure floating platforms. Tubular piles are driven into the seabed (or more commonly dropped a few metres into a soft seabed) and then a pump sucks water out at the top of the tubular, pulling the pile further down. The proportions of the pile (diameter to height) are dependent upon the soil type. Sand is difficult to penetrate but provides good holding capacity, so

5915-457: The materials are cheaper, and the work is versatile and adaptable. Prefabricated techniques are usually much quicker, therefore saving money on labour costs, but factory-made parts can be expensive. They are also inflexible, and must often be designed on a grid, with all details fully calculated in advance. Finished units may require special handling due to excessive dimensions. The phrase may also refer to those assets which are present at or near

6006-535: The motto of the Pile Driving Contractors' Association is "A Driven Pile...Is a Tested Pile!". Foundations relying on driven piles often have groups of piles connected by a pile cap (a large concrete block into which the heads of the piles are embedded) to distribute loads that are greater than one pile can bear. Pile caps and isolated piles are typically connected with grade beams to tie the foundation elements together; lighter structural elements bear on

6097-838: The observation of materials as they are exposed to external stimuli within the microscope, under conditions that mimic their natural environments. This enables real-time observation of material behavior at the nanoscale . External stimuli in in situ TEM/STEM experiments include mechanical loading and pressure, temperature changes, electrical currents ( biasing ), radiation , and environmental factors—such as exposure to gas, liquid, and magnetic field —or any combination of these. These conditions allow researchers to study atomic-level processes such as phase transformations , chemical reactions, or mechanical deformations , providing insights into material behavior and properties essential for advancements in materials science . In psychology experiments , in situ typically refers to those experiments done in

6188-555: The observation of substances and reactions under native conditions, facilitating the documentation of dynamic processes. In situ applications extend to various applied sciences as well. Aerospace industry implements on-site inspection protocols and monitoring systems for operational evaluation without system interruption. In medical terminology, particularly oncology , in situ designates early-stage cancers that remain confined to their point of origin. This diagnostic classification—indicating no invasion of adjacent tissues—serves as

6279-405: The ocean state, such as that obtained by shipboard surveying using a lowered CTD rosette that directly measure ocean salinity , temperature , pressure and other biogeochemical quantities like dissolved oxygen. Historically a reversing thermometer would be used to record the ocean temperature at a particular depth and a Niskin or Nansen bottle used to capture and bring water samples back to

6370-424: The ocean surface for further analysis of the physical, chemical or biological composition. In the atmospheric sciences , in situ refers to obtained through direct contact with the respective subject, such as a radiosonde measuring a parcel of air or an anemometer measuring wind, as opposed to remote sensing such as weather radar or satellites . In economics, in situ is used when referring to

6461-401: The orbital distance they are currently observed rather than to have migrated from a different orbit (referred to as ex situ formation ). In biology and biomedical engineering , in situ means to examine the phenomenon exactly in place where it occurs (i.e., without moving it to some special medium). In the case of observations or photographs of living animals, it means that the organism

6552-476: The reaction mixture." There are numerous situations in which chemical intermediates are synthesized in situ in various processes. This may be done because the species is unstable, and cannot be isolated, or simply out of convenience. Examples of the former include the Corey-Chaykovsky reagent and adrenochrome . In biomedical engineering, protein nanogels made by the in situ polymerization method provide

6643-469: The reactors. In architecture and building , in situ refers to construction which is carried out at the building site using raw materials - as opposed to prefabricated construction, in which building components are made in a factory and then transported to the building site for assembly. For example, concrete slabs may be cast in situ (also "cast-in-place") or prefabricated . In situ techniques are often more labour-intensive, and take longer, but

6734-414: The relevant artworks, particularly through the writings and practices of French conceptual artist and sculptor Daniel Buren , emphasized the dialectical relationship between artistic intervention and environmental context. The site-specific installations of Christo and Jeanne-Claude serve as notable examples of applying in situ principles in art. Their architectural interventions, characterized by

6825-510: The soil properties for supporting building loads, accepting underground utilities, and infiltrating water persist indefinitely. A use of the term in-situ that appears in Computer Science focuses primarily on the use of technology and user interfaces to provide continuous access to situationally relevant information in various locations and contexts. Examples include athletes viewing biometric data on smartwatches to improve their performance,

6916-429: The soil to increase bearing capacity. The result is not as solid as concrete, but should be seen as an improvement of the bearing capacity of the original soil. The technique is most often applied on clays or organic soils like peat . The mixing can be carried out by pumping the binder into the soil whilst mixing it with a device normally mounted on an excavator or by excavating the masses, mixing them separately with

7007-421: The soldier piles and the type of soils. Soldier piles are most suitable in conditions where well constructed walls will not result in subsidence such as over-consolidated clays, soils above the water table if they have some cohesion, and free draining soils which can be effectively dewatered, like sands. Unsuitable soils include soft clays and weak running soils that allow large movements such as loose sands. It

7098-446: The source/type of timber, timber piles may not be suitable for heavier loads. A main consideration regarding timber piles is that they should be protected from rotting above groundwater level. Timber will last for a long time below the groundwater level. For timber to rot, two elements are needed: water and oxygen. Below the groundwater level, dissolved oxygen is lacking even though there is ample water. Hence, timber tends to last for

7189-576: The spatial distribution and typological characteristics of unexcavated in situ deposits, thereby informing subsequent excavation plans. The Convention on the Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage establishes mandatory principles for signatory states regarding underwater shipwrecks . Among its directives is the stipulation that in situ preservation constitutes the preferred methodological approach. This protocol derives from

7280-423: The spatial relationships and environmental conditions of artifacts at excavation sites, enabling more precise historical analysis. In art theory and practice, the in situ principle guides both creation and exhibition. Site-specific artworks , such as environmental sculptures or architectural installations, demonstrate deliberate integration with their designated locations. This contextual placement establishes

7371-600: The systematic integration of these complementary methodologies substantially enhances overall diagnostic capabilities. An additional approach involves the use of alternating current (AC) and direct current (DC) sensor arrays in real-time monitoring applications, facilitating in situ detection of structural degradation phenomena—including matrix discontinuities, interlaminar delaminations , and fiber fracture mechanisms—through quantitative analysis of electrical resistance and capacitance variations within composite laminate configurations. In archaeological methodology,

7462-481: The systematic recording and cataloging of human remains in their original depositional positions, often within complex matrices that incorporate sediments , clothing, and other associated artifacts. Mass grave excavations exemplify the methodological challenges of maintaining in situ preservation, as the presence of multiple individuals, sometimes numbering in the hundreds, necessitates comprehensive documentation of spatial relationships and contextual elements prior to

7553-697: The systematic wrapping of built structures and landscape elements in textile materials, effected temporary spatial reconfigurations that altered public perception of established environments, as seen in The Pont Neuf Wrapped (1985) and Wrapped Reichstag (1995). The approach to in situ practice underwent further development through the land art movement, wherein practitioners such as Robert Smithson and Michael Heizer integrated their works directly into terrestrial environments, forging inextricable relationships between artistic intervention and geographical context. Within contemporary aesthetic discourse,

7644-1327: The term in situ designates artifacts and other materials that maintain their original depositional context, undisturbed since their initial deposition. The systematic documentation of spatial coordinates , stratigraphic position , and associated matrices of in situ materials enables the reconstruction of historical processes and cultural practices. While artifacts frequently require extraction for analytical purposes, archaeological features —including hearths , postholes , and architectural foundations —necessitate comprehensive in situ documentation to preserve contextual data during stratigraphic excavation . Documentation protocols encompass multiple recording methodologies: detailed field notation, scaled technical drawings , cartographic representation, and high-resolution photographic documentation. Contemporary archaeological practice incorporates advanced digital technologies, including 3D laser scanning , photogrammetry , unmanned aerial vehicles , and Geographic Information Systems (GIS), to capture complex spatial relationships. Materials recovered from secondary contexts ( ex situ ), including those displaced through non-professional excavation activities, demonstrate diminished interpretive value; however, such assemblages may provide diagnostic indicators regarding

7735-539: The term in situ has evolved into a theoretical construct, denoting artistic methodologies predicated on the essential unity of work and site. A fraction of the globular star clusters in the Milky Way Galaxy , as well as those in other massive galaxies, might have formed in situ . The rest might have been accreted from now-defunct dwarf galaxies. In astronomy, in situ also refers to in situ planet formation , in which planets are hypothesized to have formed at

7826-630: The term describes procedures where orthopedic plates such as bone screws are placed without altering the original alignment of the bone, as in "[the patient] was treated operatively with an in situ cannulated hip screw fixation". In situ leaching or in situ recovery refers to the mining technique of injecting lixiviant underground to dissolve ore and bringing the pregnant leach solution to surface for extraction. Commonly used in uranium mining but has also been used for copper mining. In situ refers to recovery techniques which apply heat or solvents to heavy crude oil or bitumen reservoirs beneath

7917-516: The territory, i.e. the government in situ . In linguistics , specifically syntax , an element may be said to be in situ if it is pronounced in the position where it is interpreted. For example, questions in languages such as Chinese have in situ wh-elements, with structures comparable to "John bought what?" with what in the same position in the sentence as the grammatical object would be in its affirmative counterpart (for example, "John bought bread"). An example of an English wh-element that

8008-486: The type of equipment used to install these elements, they are often used where access restrictions and or very difficult ground conditions (cobbles and boulders, construction debris, karst, environmental sensitivity) exists or to retrofit existing structures.  Occasionally, in difficult ground, they are used for new construction foundation elements. Typical applications include underpinning , bridge , transmission tower and slope stabilization projects. The use of

8099-622: The water jet lubricates the pile and softens the ground. The method is in use in Norway. Micropiles are small diameter, generally less than 300mm diameter, elements that are drilled and grouted in place.  They typically get their capacity from skin friction along the sides of the element, but can be end bearing in hard rock as well. Micropiles are usually heavily reinforced with steel comprising more than 40% of their cross section. They can be used as direct structural support or as ground reinforcement elements.  Due to their relatively high cost and

8190-498: The world. Others include London's 30 St Mary Axe (Gherkin), New York's Hearst Tower , and Beijing's National Stadium . Capital Gate was designed by architectural firm RMJM and was completed in 2011. The tower includes 16,000 square meters (170,000 sq ft) of office space and the Andaz Hotel on floors 18 through 33. Deep foundation A deep foundation is a type of foundation that transfers building loads to

8281-414: Was observed (and photographed) in the wild, exactly as it was found and exactly where it was found. This means it was not taken out of the area. The organism had not been moved to another (perhaps more convenient) location such as an aquarium. This phrase in situ when used in laboratory science such as cell science can mean something intermediate between in vivo and in vitro . For example, examining

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