January-February 2010

Challenges in Slope Stabilization

Solving problems with blankets, mesh, soil nails, and cellular confinement systems

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Photo: Uretek ICR

By Janet Arid

1 Comments

Keeping soil in place is hard enough on flat land. Engineers, contractors, and others who work with slopes have gravity to contend with as well as soil type and water.

And then there is whatever’s under the soil. The Millennium Pipeline project in New York restored environmentally sensitive agricultural land after a gas pipeline was installed. The project at the Police Evidence Storage Facility in Winston-Salem, NC, was defined not only by a debris field, but also by the discovery of an old utility pipe during construction of the parking lot. Projects are ongoing at the Williamson County Landfill in Franklin, TN, where water downstream that once was on Tennessee’s 303(d) list of impaired waters now has flourishing populations of fish and invertebrates.

These projects illustrate a number of methods to keep soil in place: geotextiles filled with mulch, soil, and limestone; blankets and turf reinforcement mats (TRMs); and steel mesh anchored to the slope. Whichever methods were used, they all allowed vegetation to take over in time.

The Millennium Pipeline
Regulations for restoring environmentally sensitive areas have been strict in New York state, ever since the controversial Iroquois Pipeline, an underground, natural-gas pipeline, was installed in the early 1990s, says Robert Hancock, president of Old Oak Environmental Restoration Inc., in Fort Plain, NY.

Photo: Uretek ICR
Crews installed Terra-Crete, a permeable concrete material inside a woven double layer of fabric, for scour protection.

“It ended up with some very serious legal issues,” he says, “and as a result, New York has a very strict protocol for restoration, particularly of agricultural land.”

The Millennium Pipeline is a new underground natural-gas pipeline in the state, the centerpiece of a larger project that involves the expansion of three other pipelines, including the Iroquois. The Millennium Pipeline project extends 182 miles across the lower Hudson Valley and the Southern Tier, mostly along existing utility easements.

Old Oak Environmental Restoration restored 96 miles of the project, through four counties in western New York, most of which was in the environmentally sensitive Chesapeake Watershed. Most of the area is countryside, consisting of agricultural land, wetlands, and mountains with primarily 3:1 slopes and greater.

“It’s adjacent to the Susquehanna and Delaware rivers,” Hancock says. “There is a lot of environmentally sensitive farmland, which requires special treatment.”

The company used erosion control blankets made by East Coast Erosion Blankets in Bernville, PA, and bought from ACF Environmental. Jim Giumarra, the contact at ACF, was also a consultant on the project.

“They needed blankets that work well on slopes,” Giumarra says. “They also had to be biodegradable and have a netting that doesn’t entangle animals.” In addition to the blankets, Old Oak Environmental Restoration used native hay mulch and revegetated with a variety of seed mixes.

When Millennium Pipeline Co. dug the trenches for the pipeline, it separated the topsoil from the subsoil, as required by state regulations that protect environmentally sensitive agricultural areas. Crews installed 30-inch-diameter steel pipes, backfilled the trenches, and regraded the right of way, which is generally 75–100 feet wide.

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Old Oak Environmental Restoration began erosion control work immediately, again as required by the state. Restoration crews followed within 1,000 feet of the construction crews, so the trenches had virtually no time to degrade. Work began in June 2008 and wrapped up for the winter in December. Old Oak Environmental Restoration went back and finished up the slopes and pastures in the summer of 2009, stabilizing the streambeds in November.

“We generally did the work six days a week, 10 to 12 hours a day,” Hancock says. “When you sign on to a project like this, you have to have the manpower and equipment.” Next Page >

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Natercon

January 13th, 2010 6:28 AM PT

If you are going to post a photo of fabric formed concrete in your magazine you should take the time to make sure that the work was completed IAW the manufacturers recommendations. Not only was the concrete mat not pumped anywhere close to what is should have been to attain full thickness, but the sides as well as the top and bottom of the mat should have been placed into an anchor trench and pumped full of grout. This installation does nothing but give fabric formed concrete a bad name. You should be ashamed to have published such shoddy work.

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