Helical piles vs concrete foundations: design and constructability notes for tower engineers
Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

First reported on Geoengineer.org – News
30 Second Briefing
Helical piles are being positioned as an alternative to traditional drilled or spread concrete foundations for lattice and monopole communication towers, particularly where uplift, lateral loads and variable soils control design. Screw-in steel piles with helix plates can be installed with smaller rigs, generate minimal spoil, allow immediate loading and are removable at decommissioning, contrasting with large-diameter drilled shafts or pad-and-pier systems that require curing time and substantial excavation. The comparison focuses on sites with constrained access, weak or layered soils, and projects needing rapid deployment or future relocation.
Technical Brief
- Install torque is correlated to axial capacity using empirical torque–capacity relationships calibrated to site conditions.
- For tall monopoles, designers often use multi-helix groups with battered piles to mobilise lateral resistance.
- Corrosion protection options include hot-dip galvanising, increased sacrificial thickness and, in aggressive soils, cathodic protection.
- Lattice tower legs can be supported on individual helical pile clusters connected via steel grillages or pile caps.
- In frost-susceptible soils, piles are extended below frost depth to avoid adfreeze uplift and seasonal movement.
- Quality control relies on real-time torque monitoring, installation depth records and post-installation tension/compression load testing.
Our Take
Within the 26 Geotechnical stories in our database, helical pile discussions most often appear in slope stabilisation and temporary works, so applying them to communication towers signals designers treating them as a mature, permanent foundation option rather than a niche solution.
Among the 1,957 tag-matched pieces, ‘Sustainability’ items that touch foundations increasingly emphasise reduced excavation and concrete volumes, which suggests that lifecycle carbon and site reinstatement obligations are starting to influence foundation selection criteria for tower projects.
Product-tagged geotechnical coverage in our database shows a cluster of items on modular and rapidly deployable systems, indicating that for remote communication towers the programme benefits of helical piles (speed, minimal plant, small crews) are now being weighed as heavily as ultimate capacity in early design decisions.
Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.
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