July-August 2006

Shoreline Protection

Large-scale projects rebuild damaged infrastructure and create new commercial space.

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By Dan Rafter

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That’s where Antinori’s factory line approach came in. Modeling the repair work after the successful and efficient production techniques popularized by Toyota engineers, Antinori divided his 35 workers into seven crews and then deployed them each to work on different segments of the project. The goal was to complete 40 to 50 feet of seawall panels each day.

Here’s how this worked: A first crew built the template, or frame, for the seawall’s panels. The second installed the wall’s carbon fiber panels. A third followed and vibrated those panels into the beach. The crew following this installed tie rods to the panels. The next group began forming 24- by 24-inch concrete caps. Still another crew poured the concrete into the caps once they were finished. Once the concrete cured, a new crew removed the caps, or forms, and one more filled and compacted the soil surrounding the newly built portion of seawall. A final crew, arriving while other crews started the process over again for the next 50 feet of seawall, performed landscaping around the newly built wall segments.

“We didn’t work 24 hours straight, but we did what we had to do to protect those buildings,” Antinori says. “Those northeastern winds, after the storms had come through, just never stopped, so the waves were always hitting the shore. You couldn’t walk on the beach here for two months. There was no beach. We had a pretty amazing four and a half months here.”

Antinori’s final challenge was to increase the protection for the buildings dotting New Smyrna Beach.

The 10 threatened buildings had been built before 1976. This meant that they had been built on typical monolithic foundations, ones that offered little protection from surging seawater.

Antinori’s crews raised the buildings, all of which were five or six stories high, and embedded huge anchors 15 to 20 feet into the ground underneath them. The crews installed steel plates under the buildings and sprayed quick-drying grout under the anchor and plate. They then lowered the buildings back atop this plate, essentially creating pilings to provide additional stability to the buildings.

“This was not a boring project at all,” Antinori says. “It was very stressful. The tension all around us during this project was unbelievable. I took it personally, because I knew I could help. It wasn’t good for my health, though. I did go a bit overboard. My doctor told me I had to chill out.”

Protecting the Marinas
Lyn Small has made his living on the shores of North Carolina’s beaches. His firm, Kitty Hawk, NC–based Lyn Small Inc., specializes in building bulkheads, boat ramps, piers, jetties, and docks—anything, Small says, that is shoreline- or water-related.

Photo: Lyn Small Inc.

Because of this, he is acutely aware of how important it’s become to protect the country’s shorelines. This area of North Carolina, after all, relies on tourism dollars. Without usable beaches, those dollars will dry up.

“The largest single portion of my business is in repairing existing bulkheads, usually ones built 30 years ago or so and made of concrete,” Small says. “We’ll go in and refurbish it or do some rebuilding work, depending on how bad a shape the bulkhead is in. People today are very aware of the condition of the bulkheads that are protecting their shorelines. What I do is a permanent part of the property when we are finished. It is intended to combat shoreline erosion. It’s not something that in six months you come in and remove. It is something that is left behind to stop shoreline erosion.”

Small and his firm are now taking on a new shoreline-protection project, the renovation and repair of a 30-some-year-old bulkhead that protects an upscale marina in Shallowbag Bay on Roanoke Island, just off the coast of North Carolina.

The owner of the marina is converting it into a residential boating community. Plans call for two new hotels, condominiums, and retail shops. The owner is also expanding the marina to allow for more boat slips. It’s little surprise that the owner has contracted Small to shore up the old bulkhead. He wants to do everything in his power to make sure that his investment is protected from the sea.

Photo: Lyn Small Inc.

Small and his crews, who started working on the project in early March, will during an estimated six-week period work on 1,600 lineal feet of concrete wall, fixing leaks and rebuilding portions that have been severely damaged.

“Enough of the bulkhead is in good enough condition to keep them from tearing it down, but it has been neglected for the past 10 to 15 years,” Small says. “It needs some serious maintenance to last another 20 years.”

The work requires a number of strategies. Small’s crews must first excavate the backside of the bulkhead and install filter cloth behind its walls to fix small leaks that have developed over the years. They are also inspecting, and replacing when needed, the rods and anchors that hold the wall in place.

Some of these rods are still in good shape, and need no attention. Salt water, though, has rusted others severely enough that Small’s workers will need to replace them.
It’s an interesting project because Small doesn’t yet know how much work he’ll have to perform on the wall. He won’t know until he and his workers finish inspecting the old structure.

Photo: Lyn Small Inc.

“These anchors and rods will typically be spaced, in a normal situation, every 6 to 8 feet,” Small says. “That’s if you were building from scratch. As far as this project goes, I have no idea yet how many rods and anchors we’ll be replacing and installing. We haven’t finished the excavation behind the wall yet.”

This project, though, is a small one compared to the work Small’s firm did at Hatteras Village, a tourist town located on Hatteras Island located off the North Carolina coast.

Here, Small’s firm was contracted to tear out an existing bulkhead protecting a large marina in the village and replace it with a newly built version. The job required that Small’s firm build 1,200 feet of new bulkhead, while not slowing the tourist trade in a village that relied on its summers to provide a good chunk of its operating expenses.

Small worked on the project for four consecutive winters, starting it in the winter of 2000 and finishing it as spring of 2005 rolled around. His firm did no work during the busy summer tourist season.

“We had to work around that summer tourist season,” Small says. “They rely on getting a lot of their income during that summer tourist season and couldn’t have the marina shut down. We understood that. It’s just one of those things that you have to work around. We worked on it from September through Memorial Day, got the project to a closed-off point, packaged things up, and made sure that they could use the marina during the summer. We’d then go back the following year. It worked out well. It was steady work throughout the winter, which is usually our slower time.”

Photo: Lyn Small Inc.

Small and his workers excavated and removed the marina’s old bulkhead in 300- to 500-foot segments. They then immediately replaced those old portions with new construction. During the job, Small noticed that because the bulkhead had leaked so much, the entire marina was filled with silt. When Small started work, in fact, the water depth at the margins of the bulkhead measured just 2 to 3 feet, a sure sign that the bulkhead had been failing.

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When Small and his crews finished, the water depth around the edges of the bulkhead had increased to a more acceptable 6 to 8 feet.

Small guarantees his work and says that his company’s bulkheads will stand firm for at least 20 years. That warranty is all-encompassing, save for manmade problems. Next Page >

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