July-August 2007

Shoreline Protection Strategies

Temporary and permanent methods to save beachfront property

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By Roberta Baxter

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The owner and his employees, with no experience in constructing gabion systems, were able to install the 1,000-foot breakwater with the rolled gabion mesh. Sections of mesh were joined with spiral connectors supplied by MGS. They placed the gabion structure at the pre-erosion line in the water and then filled the mesh with rock brought by barge from Tortola. Equipment required was a backhoe and hand tools.

Photo: EcoShore International
To mitigate erosion, a beach needs to drain effectively after each high tide.
Photo: EcoShore International

Gabion systems are cost-effective, especially if rock is available locally. Their design allows them to flex and deform under stress rather than break. The systems are easily installed, even by unskilled laborers, and do not require pilings or temporary cofferdam construction, as they can be installed in water. Very little maintenance is required.

Before the project was completed, Hurricane Bertha struck the island. Six- to 10-foot swells overtopped the gabion wall for about eight hours. After the storm had passed, the hotel owners found that the 60-foot deep, 1,000-foot-long shoreline behind the gabion breakwater had almost completely filled with sand. The storm surge transported large amounts of sand over the gabion wall, where it fell out of suspension and settled into a new beach.

The porous composition of the gabion seawall absorbs wave energy without reflecting it. Sand carried by the waves drops out of the water and into the beach area, gradually replacing the beach. The gabions, now mostly covered with sand, still provide protection to the beach. Vegetation has reestablished on the beach, providing extra erosion control. The beach has remained unaffected by exposure to at least six Category 3 hurricanes and numerous tropical storms.

The Family Campground at Patrick Air Force Base in Florida was also threatened by shoreline erosion. A 1,000-foot stretch of shore had lost several feet of beach, and some campsites were on the verge of falling into the ocean. Plans were to establish a mangrove network to provide an appealing and effective erosion control system.

Stainless steel gabion baskets from MGS were buried parallel to the beach, filled with rock, and covered with sand. Mangrove trees were planted among the gabions and seaward, and other areas were seeded with grasses. Because the gabions were buried, they don’t detract from the look of the beach. But they still provide erosion control during storm events and strength to the beach. In the years since installation, the trees and other vegetation have grown and the beach has been preserved.

Photo: Portadam
The Portadam system comprises A-frame steel pipe supports, fabric lining sides, and sealing sheet for the area bottom.
Photo: Portadam

ACBs
Articulated concrete blocks (ACBs) have a variety of uses, including shoreline protection. After three hurricanes made landfall in 2004, the Indian River Drive in St. Lucie County, FL, was near collapse. ArmorFlex 50S was chosen to line 13 miles of shoreline along the drive. With money from the Federal Emergency Management Agency, the county plan was to reinforce the banks back to a 2:1 grade and line the bottom with ACBs. The project needed to be completed quickly, and the modular aspect of the ArmorFlex allowed for the necessary speed. Ease of installation and cost were added benefits for this project.

ArmorFlex is a division of Contech, located in West Chester, OH. The ArmorFlex product is a matrix of concrete blocks connected by cables into mats. The articulation of the blocks gives the system flexibility and strength. The mats are installed over geofabric. The open blocks can be backfilled and vegetation planted in the cells.

The Indian River project involved 1.2 million square feet of mat, and the entire project was completed on time.

ArmorFlex was used in a project in the Florida Keys in 1999, and according to Dan Hunt, erosion control specialist with Contech Earth Stabilization Solutions, it still looks great. The original plan was to haul riprap from distant quarries, resulting in a high cost just for transportation. Instead, ArmorFlex was installed along a landfill on Fleming Key for the 1,800 feet of the project. Once the mats were installed, the blocks near the water level were filled with aggregate in the wave zone. Topsoil was imported (there is very little good topsoil in the Keys), and vegetation planted in the upper areas of the slope.

The maintenance of the ACBs is minimal. The vegetation may have to be tamed on the Fleming Key due to the heavy growth of tropical plants.

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Submar Inc. of Houma, LA, also manufactures and sells ACBs. The 4.5-inch revetment mat is constructed of concrete blocks and measures 8 feet by 20 feet. The blocks are connected by UV-protected copolymer ropes.

For coastal marsh open to the Gulf of Mexico, the Submar mats were installed along 80 feet of shoreline. Spaces in the mat are planted to allow vegetation to increase erosion control and aesthetics. Next Page >

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