1. Introduction
Construction projects are vital for the economy of developing countries, and deep foundation pit projects are an important component of the construction sector. Deep foundation pit projects are characterized by complex project management, substantial technical difficulties, and environmental influences, resulting in complex construction risks. Many deep foundation pit construction accidents have occurred worldwide in the past decade [
1,
2], causing property losses and casualties. Therefore, the objective evaluation of construction risks of deep foundation pit projects and the science-based formulation of response measures are research hotspots in civil engineering and management.
Deep foundation pit engineering refers to projects with an excavation depth of 5 or more meters. Projects with depths of less than 5 m are considered deep foundation pit projects if the geological and environmental conditions are complex, and underground pipelines are involved [
3]. The main components of foundation pit engineering include an engineering survey, design of supporting structures and construction, earthwork excavation and backfilling, groundwater control, information development, and environmental protection [
4].
Risk factor identification is a key aspect of risk research. Deep foundation pit projects are characterized by many types of construction methods, complex construction technology, and high technical integration. Traditional risk identification methods typically focus on single aspects of the construction risk factors of deep foundation pit projects, such as risk loss [
5] or risk sources [
6]. This approach is one-sided and prone to subjectivity. A work breakdown structure–risk breakdown structure (WBS-RBS) matrix considers the entire construction process and decomposes and classifies various risk factors involved in construction projects. Therefore, using the WBS-RBS for construction risk identification in deep foundation pit projects can substantially improve risk identification accuracy [
7]. In addition, this method minimizes risk omission and reduces the subjectivity of risk identification [
8].
The weight calculation of the risk indicator is the second key step in risk research. Many researchers used the analytic hierarchy process (AHP) [
9] or the entropy weight method [
10] to calculate the weights, but these two methods are not suitable for calculating the weight of the risk indicators of deep foundation pit projects. The AHP uses the risk assessment data of deep foundation pit construction, and although the data are easy to interpret, the results are influenced by expert opinion. The entropy weight method has high calculation accuracy but relatively low interpretability because it does not make full use of the evaluation data. The projection pursuit method (PP) obtained the objective weights from the structural characteristics of the risk evaluation data, which avoids the adverse effects of expert opinion and ensures the interpretability of the calculation results [
11].
The calculation of the risk level is the third key step of risk research. Researchers have used fuzzy comprehensive evaluation (FCE) [
12], the gray clustering method (GCM) [
13], backpropagation neural networks (BPNNs) [
14], and support vector machines (SVMs) [
15]. Traditional risk assessment methods, such as the FCE and the GCM, cannot predict the risk evolution dynamically. The BPNN or SVM methods require many sample data, which is a problem in risk assessment. It should be emphasized that none of these four methods use both qualitative and quantitative indicators. In contrast, set pair analysis (SPA) uses qualitative and quantitative indicators and the concepts of identity, difference, and opposition to describe the uncertain relationship of risks. The partial connection number and set pair potential of multiple connection numbers can reveal the evolution of the risk factors [
16]. However, it is difficult to objectively describe the uncertainty of the data near the index grade interval in the traditional SPA.
Risk management is hierarchical, and different levels of risk management have different objectives, methods, and depths. In this paper, we evaluate the risk of the whole deep foundation pit project from the view of project decision-makers, and various construction risk factors should be considered. The research results of this paper are not closely related to a specific risk factor in the project. However, the research to find the overall risk level and key risk factors of the project is valuable.
Therefore, we propose a novel construction risk assessment method for deep foundation pit projects. The main contributions of this paper are as follows. (1) An index system is established based on the WBS-RBS matrix to deal with the complex technology and high technical integration of deep foundation pit projects. (2) The PP is employed to obtain objective weights to avoid the adverse effects of expert opinion and obtain suitable interpretability. (3) The SPA is used to analyze the construction risk of deep foundation pit projects, providing a static and dynamic assessment of the construction risk level. We improved the calculation method of the five-element connection number at the evaluation level to obtain an accurate estimate of the uncertainty of the evaluation indices of different risk levels. (4) Qi ‘an Fu in Huanggang City, China, was selected as a case study. The results provide a new perspective for related research on foundation pit projects.
The rest of this paper is organized as follows.
Section 2 summarizes the related research.
Section 3 describes the establishment of the construction risk evaluation index system of deep foundation pit projects.
Section 4 presents the novel construction risk assessment method of deep foundation pit projects based on the PP and the improved SPA.
Section 5 describes the case study of the deep foundation pit project of Qi ‘an Fu in Huanggang City, China.
Section 6 provides the discussion, and
Section 7 concludes the paper.
2. Related Research
Zhou and Zhang [
5] analyzed the construction safety accidents of typical deep foundation pit projects in recent years and constructed an evaluation index system from the perspective of risk loss. However, this study only focused on large risk loss and used no indices for high incidence. Meng et al. [
6] investigated the construction risk factors and risk sources of deep foundation pit projects but did not consider the construction complexity. Wu and Wang [
17] analyzed the waterlogging disaster risk in the construction stage of a deep foundation pit. The authors considered the disaster vulnerability and exposure to disaster risk during construction, but not the construction process. Zhang et al. [
2] determined the risk factors leading to a foundation pit collapse. This index system had low generalization ability because it was designed for a specific disaster.
Wang [
18] improved the comprehensiveness and objectivity of the cost risk identification results of power grid construction projects by increasing the dimensions of the analysis. Qu et al. [
19] improved the WBS-RBS to identify the water inrush risk in coal mines under complex geological conditions and excavation methods. The improved WBS was used to decompose the coal excavation method, and the improved RBS was used to decompose the risk factors caused by geological conditions. Jeong and Jeong [
20] researched construction safety accidents in India and South Korea using statistical hypothesis testing and demonstrated the applicability of the WBS-RBS for construction safety risk management. Joubert and Pretorius [
21] used the WBS-RBS to establish a risk index system for port construction projects. This index system included 215 risk factors, providing insights for similar projects.
Feng et al. [
9] used the AHP to calculate the weights of the safety risk indices of deep foundation pit projects. However, the AHP did not deal well with the influence of expert opinions on the weight calculation results. The index weights differed for different experts. Li et al. [
10] used the entropy weight method to calculate the weights of the risk indices of a reconstruction project. The empirical research results showed that the entropy weight method had satisfactory calculation accuracy and stability and was not influenced by the subjective opinions of experts. However, the entropy weight method results are often not suitable for practical engineering projects. Zhang et al. [
11] constructed a PP evaluation model and improved it using information entropy to obtain the index weights. Wu and Wang [
17] used the PP model optimized by Particle Swarm Optimization (PSO) to analyze the risk factors. This article provided the inspiration for our study.
Gehiwet and Luo [
12] used the FCE method to determine the risk level of construction projects. However, the FCE requires membership functions, and it is difficult to describe the uncertainty of the risk factors. These two shortcomings limit the application of the FCE for risk management of deep foundation pit projects. Lee et al. [
13] used the GCM to predict the risk level of unsafe behaviors of construction workers and achieved satisfactory prediction results. However, the GCM can only provide a static risk level, not a dynamic risk level. Deng et al. [
14] used a BPNN to evaluate the construction risk of tunnel construction projects. Li et al. [
15] used a least-squares (LS)-SVM to predict the safety risk of bridge construction. BPNNs and LS-SVMs require a large sample size, which is difficult to obtain in deep foundation pit projects. Chen et al. [
16] regarded the tunnel collapse risk grade and evaluation data as a set pair and established a tunnel collapse risk evaluation model based on the SPA for the dynamic prediction of construction risk. Empirical research has demonstrated the feasibility and effectiveness of SPA for risk evolution. Sui et al. [
22] constructed an SPA-based occupational health and safety risk assessment method for nuclear power plant construction projects. The method effectively dealt with the high uncertainty and complexity of nuclear power plant construction projects. However, it is difficult to objectively describe the uncertainty of data near the index grade interval in the traditional SPA.
Despite many research achievements in risk assessments of deep foundation pit projects, the following challenges remain and are solved in this study.
(1) The construction risk of deep foundation pit projects is complex and diverse. Most risk factor identification methods are subjective and one-sided. Thus, an objective and comprehensive risk factor identification method is required.
(2) The traditional weight calculation method is not suitable for risk assessments of deep foundation pit projects. A quantitative weight calculation method that provides weights with strong interpretability and high accuracy is needed.
(3) Construction risk assessments of deep foundation pit projects are characterized by an incompatibility between qualitative and quantitative indices, a small sample size, and fuzzy features. Therefore, a science-based method is needed for an accurate assessment of the risk level.
3. Construction Risk Evaluation Index System of Deep Foundation Pit Projects
3.1. Introduction of the WBS-RBS
The WBS and RBS form a systematic method to identify risks in deep foundation pit construction projects. The WBS decomposes complex deep foundation pit projects into several construction procedures [
8] and project management plans, and organizes the construction process [
2,
18]. The RBS decomposes the risks of deep foundation pit projects. After predicting the risk factors that may cause construction accidents, the project managers decompose the project according to the risk status of the project and the surrounding environment. The risk factors obtained by the RBS are easy to control. A representative WBS-RBS is shown in
Figure 1.
The main construction risk identification steps of deep foundation pit projects based on WBS-RBS are as follows:
Step 1: Determining the objectives of risk identification. The objectives and the scope of risk identification should be determined according to the risk assessment requirements.
Step 2: Decomposition of construction work. The construction process of deep foundation pit projects can be decomposed step by step according to the order of the project and sub-projects. The project is decomposed into work units suitable for risk identification.
Step 3: Decomposition of construction risk. The risk sources are decomposed by considering the project characteristics and expert investigation. Similarly, the decomposed risk units must be suitable for risk identification.
Step 4: Identifying the main risk factors. All possible risk events and main risk factors during the construction of the deep foundation pit project are analyzed to conduct a risk assessment.
3.2. WBS Decomposition of the Construction Process of Deep Foundation Pit Projects
According to Risk Management—Guidelines (ISO 31000:2018), the Code for the Design of Building Foundations (GB 50007-2011), the Technical Standard for Monitoring of Building Excavation Engineering (GB 50497-2019), and the Technical Code for Construction Safety of Deep Building Foundation Excavations (JGJ 311-2013), the construction process of deep foundation pit projects can be divided into Construction Preparation (W1), Earthworks (W2), Support Construction (W3), Drainage Engineering (W4), and Monitoring (W5).
Construction Preparation (W1) includes Pipeline Migration (W11) and Site Leveling (W12). Pipeline Migration (W11) refers to relocating or developing an on-site water supply, drainage, power supply, heating trunk lines, main roads, and flood control projects. Site Leveling (W12) refers to leveling the ground to prepare the site by excavating and filling. This step includes the construction survey, earthwork allocation, construction machinery selection, and filling and compaction.
Earthworks (W2) includes Earthwork Excavation (W21) and the Erection of Supports (W22). Earthwork Excavation (W21) refers to excavation, filling, and transportation of materials. The Erection of Supports (W22) describes the construction of temporary supports for earthworks rather than supports for deep foundation pit construction.
Support Construction Engineering (W3) refers to the measures to support, reinforce, and protect the sidewall and surrounding environment of the deep foundation pit to ensure the safety of underground construction and the environment of the foundation pit. Common supporting projects include an Underground Diaphragm Wall (W31), Bored Pile (W32), Bolt Support System (W33), and other Supporting Structures (W34).
Drainage Engineering (W4) refers to dewatering projects to ensure that the foundation pit remains dry during construction to prevent slope instability, foundation sand flow, pit bottom uplift, pit bottom piping, and foundation bearing capacity decline when the groundwater level is higher than the bottom of the excavation. Commonly used drainage methods are the Open Ditch Plus Collection Well (W41), Light Well Point (W42), Jet Well Point (W43), Electroosmotic Well Point (W44), and Tube Well Point (W45) methods.
Monitoring (W5) refers to deformation detection and stress detection of the supporting structure system during the construction of the deep foundation pit. It includes the Monitoring Method (W51), the Measuring Point Layout (W52), and Emergency Management (W53).
3.3. RBS Decomposition of Construction Risk of Deep Foundation Pit Projects
The construction risk sources of deep foundation pit projects are divided into five risk factors: Human (R1), Material (R2), Equipment (R3), Method (R4), and Environment (R5).
Human (R1) refers to the risk factors related to project managers and construction operators. According to the accident causation theory, human factors are a leading cause of safety accidents, for physical and physiological reasons and due to a lack of safety knowledge, safe working habits, and safety awareness. Physical reasons include being prone to fatigue, becoming sick, and getting hurt. Physiological reasons include physical disabilities, a withdrawn personality, and lacking emotional control.
Material (R2) refers to risk factors related to construction materials, including poor quality, poor physical properties, and insufficient material performance, which are hidden dangers of construction safety accidents. Poor physical properties include unsatisfactory strength, bending, compressive, and tensile properties. Insufficient material performance means that the size, quantity, or type of material does not meet the safety requirements.
Equipment (R3) refers to risk factors related to construction equipment. Common equipment used in the construction of deep foundation pits includes a rotary excavator, excavator, jet grouting pile machine, crane, wall trenching machine, and a concrete jet machine. Improper equipment, inadequate equipment loading and unloading, extensive wear and aging of parts, delayed maintenance, and a lack of safety devices can result in unsafe conditions and cause accidents in deep foundation pit construction.
Method (R4) refers to risk factors related to construction methods. The support system of deep foundation pit engineering is a temporary structure. However, technical risk factors are present due to the long construction period. For example, if a support structure has shifted due to measurement errors, displacement of the foundation pit soil may result, resulting in potential collapse.
Environment (R5) refers to risk factors related to the construction environment. The construction area typically has complex geology, different landforms, and high construction risk. A narrow construction site, high building density, numerous underground pipelines, and complex underground facilities contribute to high risk during the construction of deep foundation pits.
The W1–W5 factors represent the rows and the R1–R5 factors represent the columns in the WBS-RBS matrix.
3.4. Construction Risk Index System of Deep Foundation Pit Projects
A literature review, expert interviews, and other methods were used to identify the secondary indices of the construction risk of deep foundation pit projects to create the WBS-RBS matrix. Twenty experts with engineering experience in related fields were invited to evaluate the secondary indices using a score of 0 or 1.
Section 5 provides detailed information on the 20 experts. We used the construction risk source as the primary index and established the construction risk index system of the deep foundation pit project (
Table 1).
, , , , , , , , , and are quantitative indices, whose scores were obtained using on-site statistics. The other indicators are qualitative indicators, whose index scores were obtained from the questionnaire survey.
A suitable evaluation system is crucial to ensure the authenticity and accuracy of the evaluation results and is the basis for the scientific risk assessment of deep foundation pit construction. Quantitative, practical, and scientific evaluation standards have been established to assess the construction safety risk of deep foundation pit projects [
1,
2,
3]. We used the Technical Code for Construction Safety of Deep Building Foundation Excavations (JGJ 311-2013) and the Safety Management Regulations for Dangerous Sub-projects (Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development Order [2018] No. 37) as construction risk assessment standards of deep foundation pit projects (
Table 1). Five risk classification levels were used. I indicates no risk, with no need for any risk management measures. II indicates tolerable risk, and the implementation of the risk management measures should be checked. III indicates acceptable risk, but targeted risk measures should be taken. IV indicates unacceptable risk, and immediate measures should be taken to reduce the risk level. V indicates unacceptable risk, and the construction work should be stopped immediately to rectify the problems.
4. Construction Risk Assessment Method of Deep Foundation Pit Projects
The risk assessment model proposed in this paper is mainly divided into five parts: (1) data collection, (2) calculating the objective weights based on the PP optimized by PSO, (3) determining the set pair model according to the risk management, (4) static analysis based on the confidence, and (5) dynamic analysis based on the set pair potential.
4.1. Objective Weight Calculation Based on the PP
The principle of the PP is to find an optimal projection direction by analyzing the structure and characteristics of high-dimensional data and project the high-dimensional data into a one-dimensional to three-dimensional space in the optimal projection direction [
11]. The PP has advantages for small sample sizes and high-dimensional data. In addition, the structural features (objective weights) of the data are obtained by projecting the data from a high-dimensional space to a low-dimensional space [
17].
The steps of calculating the index weight using the PP are as follows.
Step 1. Projecting high-dimensional data.
In the evaluation data , represents the -th index value of the -th evaluation object, is the number of evaluation objects, and is the number of indices. The evaluation data are in the form of a high-dimensional nonlinear matrix, which is difficult to deal with when using traditional evaluation methods.
The objective of the PP is to project
to
and obtain the projection value of the low-dimensional space
[
11]:
where
, and
.
Step 2. Constructing the objective function.
Different projection vectors correspond to different projection values. The optimal projection value of the low-dimensional space
should reflect the characteristics of the high-dimensional space, i.e., the projection points in the low-dimensional space should be clustered, but the projection points should be dispersed. The standard deviation and local density of the projection points are used to define the optimal projection function [
17]:
where
is the standard deviation of the projection values. The larger the
, the more scattered the projection points are in the low-dimensional space.
is the local density of the projection values. The larger the
, the higher the density of the projection points is in the low-dimensional space.
represents the average value of the projection values,
is the distance between the projection points,
is the unit step function, and
is the radius of the observation window.
Step 3. Solving the objective function based on the PSO.
The PSO is selected to solve the objective function. It is a stochastic optimization algorithm based on the iterative updating of the population. The particle constantly adjusts its velocity (
) and position (
) by tracking the individual optimal solution (
) and the population optimal solution (
) to approach the optimal solution of the objective function [
17]:
where
and
are learning factors, and
is a random number in the range of [0, 1].
Equation (2) is used as the fitness function of the PSO. The optimal solution is obtained using Equations (5) and (6), and the optimal projection vector () is obtained after reaching the predetermined termination condition. The square of each element in the is the objective weight of the corresponding index.
4.2. Static and Dynamic Risk Assessment Based on the Improved SPA
The concept of SPA is to regard two related data sets as a set pair and analyze the correlation between them by considering the identity, difference, and opposite criteria. In the risk assessment of deep foundation pit construction, the risk assessment data and the preset risk assessment standard form a set pair. The risk level is assessed by the similarity coefficient, difference coefficient, and opposition coefficient.
The SPA describes the certainty and uncertainty of the system and their mutual transformation using the connection number. The expression of the ternary connection degree is [
16]:
where
,
, and
are the degrees of similarity, difference, and opposition of the set pair, respectively.
and
are the difference coefficient and opposition coefficient, respectively.
However, in the classical SPA, the ternary connection degree expresses the similarity, difference, and opposition separately. Therefore, the five-element connection number
is used to describe the fuzzy uncertainty of the set pairs more accurately [
22]:
where
is the identity coefficient;
,
, and
are difference coefficients;
,
and
are difference coefficients;
is the opposition coefficient;
is the degree of opposition; and
.
Errors can occur in the evaluation index when the three-element or five-element connection numbers are used. Therefore, we improved the SPA and applied the identity, difference, and opposition attributes to the interval to describe the uncertainty and improve the risk assessment accuracy. The improved calculation method of the five-element connection number
is as follows:
where
represents the upper or lower limit of the risk level, and
represents the evaluation data.
After obtaining the five-element connection number from Equation (9), the weighted five-element connection number function
is established:
We use the confidence concept to determine the static risk level of deep foundation pit construction:
where
,
, …,
. The confidence
is generally 0.6, indicating a risk-averse attitude.
The partial derivatives of the five-element connection number reflect the evolution of the construction risk of deep foundation pit projects.
The first partial derivative
is:
The second partial derivative
is:
The third partial derivative
is:
The fourth partial derivative
is:
The principle of SPA is to compare the similarity and difference coefficients. For example, in the first-order partial derivative, indicates the same potential and a trend toward a lower risk level. indicates a balanced potential, with no change in the risk level. indicates a contrary potential and a trend toward a higher risk level. Project managers of deep foundation pit projects should focus on the risk indicators with a contrary potential and implement targeted countermeasures.
4.3. The Implementation of the Proposed Evaluation Model
The flow chart of risk assessment of deep foundation pit construction in this paper is shown in
Figure 2, and the detailed steps were as follows.
Step 1: Collecting data. On-the-spot investigation and expert interviews were used to collect evaluation data, and the reliability of the obtained data was analyzed.
Step 2: Calculating the weight. According to the collected evaluation data, the objective function of the projection pursuit model was constructed by Equation (2), and it was solved by Equations (5) and (6) in the solution space by using the powerful nonlinear solving ability of the PSO. According to the index weight of the best projection vector, the objective weight of the index was obtained.
Step 3: Constructing the set pair model. The sample data and risk assessment standard of deep foundation pit construction were combined into a set pair. The five-element connection number was calculated by Equation (9), and the weighted five-element connection number was calculated by Equation (10).
Step 4: Static evaluation of risk. According to the risk attitude of managers, the appropriate confidence coefficient was selected. By Equation (11), the risk level of the project was statically determined.
Step 5: Dynamic evaluation of risk. According to Equations (12)–(15), the partial derivatives would be obtained, and the risk evolution was analyzed according to set pair potential.
6. Discussion
6.1. Comparison of Different Weight Calculation Methods
The AHP [
9] and the entropy weight method [
10] were used to calculate the index weights to demonstrate the superiority of the PP for the weight calculation. The results are listed in
Table 7. The weights of the AHP were calculated using the Yaahp software.
The ranking of the first-level indicators is the same for the PP and AHP, but the ranking order of and is different, i.e., 69.95% of the secondary indicators have the same order, but only seven indicators (e.g., ) have different orders of importance. The index weights calculated by the AHP exhibit large differences, unlike those obtained from the PP. When the evaluation matrix of the AHP does not match the test standard, the evaluation and scoring must be repeated. This process is not required in the PP; thus, it has better applicability.
The weight of the environment () ranks second for the entropy weight method. However, the geological survey data and field survey showed no unfavorable geological landforms and no flood threat. Therefore, there is a substantial difference between the weight ranking obtained from the entropy weight method and engineering practice. The entropy weight method uses the entropy as an indicator of the dispersion of an index. The greater the degree of dispersion, the greater the influence of the index is on the overall evaluation results. The greater the difference in the experts’ opinions, the greater the weight of the index is, rather than the more important weight.
6.2. Comparison of Different Evaluation Methods
The Classic SPA [
8], FCE [
12], GCM [
13], BPNN [
14], and SVM [
15] were selected to calculate the risk level of the case to evaluate the advantages of the improved SPA. The Classic SPA, FCE, and GCM calculate the index weights based on the PP. A sigmoid activation function is used in the BPNN, and the minimum convergence error is 10
−5. For the SVM model, 10 groups of parameters are randomly selected, and the average of the 10 calculation results is used as the risk analysis result.
The FCE evaluation result of the case is [0.000, 0.172, 0.347, 0.343, 0.228]; therefore, the construction risk level is IV. Although the two evaluation models provide different levels of construction risk, the degree of membership of III and IV is relatively close. The weights of some indicators substantially affect the evaluation results, and the weights of some key indicators are large. Thus, they skew the result. The SPA method avoids this problem, accurately reflects the differences between the evaluation units, and provides a more accurate assessment of the uncertainty and risk of the project.
The calculation results of the gray correlation degree of the risk levels obtained from the GCM are listed in
Table 8. The gray correlation degree of the case is 0.4956, and the risk level is III. The evaluation results are consistent with the SPA method. The GCM prevents ambiguity of the indices. However, the method is too subjective for this project because the optimal values of the secondary indices are predetermined, unlike in the SPA method.
The results of the BPNN and SVM are listed in
Table 9. The results differ substantially. The reason may be that the sample size is too small to train the BPNN and SVM.
7. Conclusions
A novel construction risk assessment method for deep foundation pit projects is proposed in this paper. The construction risk was assessed using the WBS-RBS method, the PP model optimized by PSO was used to calculate the index weights objectively, and the SPA was used for risk assessment of the deep foundation pit construction project. This new method would better deal with the complexity, uncertainty, and dynamics of construction safety risks of deep foundation pit projects, and provide more valuable suggestions for managers and decision makers.
Empirical research showed that the risk assessment result was III, which was consistent with the actual project conditions. Its risk was acceptable, but targeted risk measures should be taken. The equipment risk represented the highest risk in the primary indicators; material supply efficiency and material price rationality ranked the most important in the secondary indicators. Project managers should devote major resources to the management of these key risk factors. The method outperformed the analytic hierarchy process, entropy weight method, classical set pair analysis, fuzzy comprehensive evaluation, gray clustering method, backpropagation neural network, and support vector machine, providing theoretical and practical references for the risk assessment of similar deep foundation pit construction projects. In addition, this paper clarified the importance of risk management from the dynamic evolution of risk of the case project, which was a valuable vision.
The main limitations of this paper are the non-universality of the index system and the shortage of engineering data. A general risk index system for deep foundation pit should be constructed in the future. Considering that the acquisition of engineering data has always been the difficulty of research, how to fully mine the risk assessment information of small sample data is also worth studying. In addition, this paper failed to describe and exactly implement this new method in the specific risk factors of a real-time deep pit foundation context, which was also a limitation.