July-August 2009

Retaining Walls: the Inside Story

A look at construction methods, drainage systems, and seismic design

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Photo: Tensar International

By Steve Goldberg

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He adds, “While it’s not a long bridge, it’s geometrically challenging along its entire length as it winds and curves on a downhill slope over the creek with two skewed angles. So we needed to construct bridge walls that curve concentrically around the creek’s bend—and we needed to do it quickly before the next snowfall. Steel beams and a concrete poured deck would simply take too long.”

The Stone Strong Systems cavity-fill retaining wall blocks, provided by LHV Precast, served two purposes. They lined the creek bed and provided bridge deck support at the abutments. “We actually capped the walls with concrete and made a bridge seat out of them, and put precast slabs on them for a bridge,” says Bell.

Because the channel winds through the neighborhoods and was getting close to the existing houses, there was no room for the use of geogrid. Furthermore, as Bell explains, “There was no need to use a geogrid. The Stone Strong walls are such that for that height wall you don’t need geogrid—they’re self-standing. For the most part, the blocks are filled with stone. Under the bridge seat, we filled them with concrete.”

A separate drainage system was unnecessary because the stone-filled hollow cores of the retaining wall blocks act as the unit’s drainage system. The concrete-filled portions supporting the bridge deck were narrow enough not to cause drainage concerns.

Asked to identify the biggest challenge of this project, Bell says, “Mostly geometry! The two walls on either side of the creek were on concentric circles, and the street itself was on almost a 45-degree skew with the stream at that point. It didn’t make a nice 90-degree angle under the bridge; it was actually on an arc. There are three panels of the precast bridge slabs that we put down at one dimension of skew, and downstream three are on a different skew angle, so it was definitely a challenge.”

Another issue was the tight working space, with houses nearby. “We closed the road off,” Bell says. “It’s a relatively narrow street. Getting the crane in there to set the pieces and wires was a little tough. The beauty of these blocks is you can set them with a large excavator, so it wasn’t until we got to the bridge slabs that we needed the crane. You can just offload the blocks right from the truck and set them right down with a large excavator right into the stream and backfill them. We actually put a temporary dam upstream and downstream of the site and pumped the water around the site. We didn’t actually work in the stream.”

Canton Marketplace
Canton Marketplace, in Canton, GA, is a mixed-use site being developed for condos, retail space, and possibly single-family residences. As Joe Bailey of Tensar International explains, “It’s a very large project—about 75,000 to 80,000 square feet for the retaining wall—and there are some interesting features to the project. The height of the walls reaches over 50 feet in spots, and they have a broken section in which to plant trees for architectural interest. Some sections have trellises attached so that ivy can grow up on them.”

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Tensar supplied geogrid for the project, while Shelby Block provided the retaining wall blocks. Contour Mesa Retaining Wall Systems handled the engineering and construction work.

Whereas a geogrid might normally extend just a few feet back into the retaining wall backfill, for Canton Marketplace it was extraordinarily long. “It’s probably a 40- or 50-foot grid length—there’s a lot of grid in this project,” Bailey says. But no anchoring was required. “They don’t need to be anchored; they don’t need to distribute stresses that way. They interlock with the soil and they distribute stresses back through the soil.” Next Page >

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pbennett

September 15th, 2009 10:03 AM PT

No ads please

JETFilter

July 15th, 2009 9:16 AM PT

Many waterfront properties all over the world having retaining walls or seawalls are aging to the point of needing repair or worse, replacement. Failure to provide proper weep hole relief has resulted in water being trapped behind the wall causing erosion, pressure, and wall failure. Natural erosion can be controlled (possibly even prevented altogether) with the use of a proper weep hole drain. Water pressure can be released without taking the valuable soil into the bay or canal further preventing erosion or sink holes. The Jet Filter flush mount system can be easily installed and maintained from the waterside of a new or existing seawall and retaining wall. The purpose of weep holes is to relieve hydrostatic pressure from behind the wall. Properly maintained, the seawall should last a lifetime without major repairs. The patent pending Jet Filter relieves hydrostatic pressure on almost any wall design. "The fix permits drainage without erosion (about 6 months now). I used to be able to see multiple areas where there was flow over the top of the wall (from rainfall accumulations behind the seawall). I have seen none since completing the Jet Filter installation". (Sonny, Homeowner Gantt Lake, Alabama). As a former marine contractor, creator and inventor David Gentry has been providing weep hole drains throughout the world to marine contractors, engineers and homeowners. The materials used in the manufacturing of the Jet Filter are UV protected, durable and consistent with the life of the seawall/bulkhead. For additional information on the Jet Filter System contact David Gentry at 239-825-4508 or visit http://www.jetfiltersystem.com.

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