January-February 2008

Channel Armoring

Protecting the waterways

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By Dan Rafter

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Not every option is appropriate for every waterway. But those engineers who are creative can find the ideal solution to their erosion control challenges by mixing and matching these possible solutions.

“As people get more educated about all the different ways you can prevent erosion, as more people take classes in these techniques, I think you’ll see even more creative solutions to erosion issues,” says Brett Troyer, head of the erosion control and turf-establishment division at the Minnesota Department of Transportation, whose department often must provide protection plans for streams and channels when it takes on road-improvement and -expansion plans.

“We’re already seeing people paying more attention to erosion,” Troyer says. “People are more aware of how important it is to protect these waterways. Now we are seeing people learn how to put erosion control methods into a plan so that those methods can be bid properly and constructed properly.”

The Elm Creek project in Martin County is a good example of the benefits of a varied approach to channel protection. Officials with the NRCS needed to shore up the creek’s banks along a 400-foot stretch.

Construction crews began the project by cutting into the stream’s existing bank and installing large pieces of rock, creating a new, hardier bank for the waterway. Crews then replaced the displaced soil and began the project’s next phase: stabilizing the area with natural vegetation.

Crews laid brush mattress—a layer of interlaced live branches cut from willow trees—along the bank’s face. They finished the project by planting a series of live willow trees above the rock and mattress to provide added stability to the creek’s banks.

Photo: Mark Pearson, NRCS
Erosion control solutions at Elm Creek include a rock-walled streambank.

The creek has held up well, and bus drivers can rumble past it without worrying about flooded roads. This success is typical of the approach the NRCS takes when tackling erosion control projects, Maassel Jacobsen says.

“We work hard to come up with things that creatively keep the streams as protected as possible,” she says. “They are often very site specific. So we don’t rule anything out as an erosion control device.”

The conservation service’s first goal in any project is to keep any water at the top of slopes. To do this, the service relies on water and sediment control basins, dikes, or other diversionary protection methods.

For long-term protection, the agency turns to products such as articulated concrete block, turf reinforcement mats, riprap, and gabions.

The agency’s engineers and planners consider several factors when deciding which erosion control measures to go with on a specific project, Maassel Jacobsen says.

“You always have to consider, of course, the ultimate purpose of a project. That will certainly guide you in which erosion control methods you are going to use,” she notes. “For instance, if you are working on a project and there’s a stream that runs close to an individual landowner, they will probably have concerns about aesthetics. They’ll want whatever you do to look nice. That has to come into play when you are picking your erosion control methods. The landowner has to be happy. Of course, it has to do the job structurally, too, so sometimes it is a balancing act.”

In situations where aesthetics is a concern, the NRCS sometimes combines bioengineering solutions with manmade products. “We like to look at the stream: Where is it going? Where does it lie in the broader floodplain? Is it a meandering stream, or is it more stable? All those factors play into our decision,” Maassel Jacobsen says.

To protect some waterways, agency engineers may call for hard-armor solutions below the channel-forming discharge point, to help keep it from the view of observers. Plans may then call for vegetated geosynthetic grids, natural vegetation, or other more visually pleasing alternatives to be placed above the hard-armor protection.

The agency even plans its placement of rock protection to provide the biggest benefit to the waterway. “There is usually a way that we can place the rocks so that we create a fish habitat,” Maassel Jacobsen says. “We can create a resting place, a corner nook, for the fish. We’ll work with biologists to create something that is mutually agreeable to everyone.”

Officials with the Missouri Department of Transportation take the same approach. John Howland, environmental studies coordinator with the department, says that his agency often must protect streams, channels, and other waterways when expanding or improving roads. This happens especially frequently when the department is replacing or building new bridges.

Like other agencies, the Missouri DOT relies on a host of products to protect its waterways. The department employs erosion control blankets, turf reinforcement mats, and natural vegetation.

But the department’s most powerful weapon against bank erosion is what it calls its Type C berm. Department officials developed this berm—made of shot rock and standing about 3 feet high—about five years ago. Crews build it parallel to waterways on the high bank with a 3:1 slope.

Howland says that the berm has become the go-to erosion control device for the department. “It’s the best tool we have,” he says. “When we used to use silt fence along the high bank adjacent to the stream, we found that it wasn’t rigid or robust enough.”

Construction vehicles would knock the silt fence over whenever they bumped against it, something that happens frequently during busy construction projects. Heavy rains would often flatten the fences, too, as would strong floodwaters.

The Type C berm, though, stands up to all this punishment, Howland says. “You have to knock these down intentionally with construction equipment or they’ll stay up indefinitely,” he says. “When we devised this tool, we put it into our specifications as a desired and preferred BMP [best management practice] in our stormwater pollution prevention plan that we need to prepare for all our Missouri Department of Transportation job sites. It goes in harmony with our NPDES [National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System] operating permits.”

The department first used its new berm six years ago along a portion of Shoal Creek near the city of Joplin, MO.

The department needed to replace an 80-year-old bridge that spanned the creek. To do this, construction crews first built a new bridge, which ran just under 200 feet long, adjacent to the old one. They then demolished the old bridge. The creek along this portion was 2 feet deep and about 30 feet wide.

The department turned to its new berm after local residents expressed concerns that the construction activity would erode the waterway and pose a threat to an endangered mussel species that lived in the creek. Engineers decided that the creek needed the extra protection that its Type C concrete berm would provide.

The berm proved effective. It ran about 100 feet on each side of the creek. Crews also installed silt fence on 90-degree angles that ran parallel to the creek’s fill slope. The stream did not suffer erosion during the process, and the berm prevented construction debris from falling into its waters.

Once construction crews finished demolishing the old bridge, they knocked down the berm and raked the rocks back, providing a hard surface to the streambank and hardening the ditches that run toward Shoal Creek.

By now, the Missouri DOT has perfected the way it uses its Type C berm. Howland says the berm works best when contractors install the structure before they start any land clearing or grubbing on the approaches of roadways. If the berm is already in place when contractors do start clearing the land, it will capture soil particles and other debris on its upper face, before these pollutants reach waterways.

The department also recommends that contractors place a layer of straw along the Type C berm to filter out the very fine soil particles that erode from the abutment. In other cases, the department advises construction crews to lay silt fence fabric along the upper face of the berm, again to keep fine materials from reaching the stream.

“We are very happy with the structure,” Howland says. “And after the project offices and project teams caught on to it, these structures began showing up on 80% of our bridge-crossing projects. They are a little pricey compared to silt fence. But excavating equipment, a trackhoe, cannot knock them down. They are not going to get blown down by a 2-inch rain. When floodwaters inundate the site, they still remain intact.”

The Minnesota DOT relies on its own variety of materials to protect the channels running through or alongside its construction projects. The department uses everything from silt fence to articulated concrete blocks to keep its waterways safe from erosion during construction projects.

Perhaps the most inventive channel-protection measure that the department uses is the plastic-lined diversion ditch that the department developed on its own. On projects that may endanger existing waterways, such as the building of culverts or bridge crossings, construction crews dig a ditch that connects to an existing waterway and then winds its way around the construction site, bypassing the work area. Construction crews then line the ditch with plastic. This keeps the stream or creek flowing if the waterway has trout or other fish passing through it.

Doing this requires that crews dam one side of the waterway and then use pumps to send the water into the temporary bypass ditch. Crews can then send the stream out of the construction site until the work is done.

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In other cases, the department relies on silt fence wrapped with geotextiles to separate the work zone from a waterway. Crews have also installed articulated concrete blocks, riprap, and the occasional gabion.

Today, the department also looks for natural solutions to erosion problems. Crews may plant willows, for instance, to protect streambanks. Next Page >

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