March-April 2006

Streambank Stabilization

Helping streams and channels withstand high-velocity flows.

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By Bill Tice

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Richard has used other streambank stabilization techniques in the past, such as riprap, but had not used the ArmorFlex product until now. “We had seen the product used up and down the river and the city had used it for other projects, so we were comfortable specifying it for the wastewater treatment plant upgrade.”

Keeping Pipes Underground
Butch Till, a technical specialist with the Lake Charles, LA–based Trunkline Gas Co., which is part of Houston, TX–headquartered Panhandle Energy, recently used concrete mats to stabilize the bank along a 150-yard section of Hickahala Creek, which is located in the Yazoo Basin and close to Senatobia, MS.

PHOTO: SUBMAR
A project two years after installation

“The creek actually looks wide enough to be a river because it was redirected by the Army Corps of Engineers for drainage purposes,” explains Till. “The widening project was doing what it was supposed to do in terms of drainage, but increasing water levels during high-water events coupled with sandy, loose soil that is uncompacted was beginning to expose our pipes, which carry natural gas from the Gulf Coast to the country’s heartland. We have two pipes running through this area. One is a 30-inch-diameter pipe and the other is a 36-inch-diameter pipe, and they must remain underground.”

Till worked with Submar Inc. of Houma, LA, to correct the problem. “We brought Submar in and they installed their 9-inch Construction Mats, which are 8-foot by 20-foot articulating mats in a thickness of 9 inches. The concrete mats were positioned with an excavator and then tied together with stainless steel bands. They go over top of the pipes, preventing any further erosion of the bank. Rock structures were also placed in the creek to work in conjunction with the mats.”

Submar’s 9-inch mats are well known in the pipeline business and are primarily used for separation, stabilization, and protection of underwater pipelines in both deep and shallow water. The design of the mats allows for self-silting and proper separation between the pipelines. Submar introduced concrete mat technology to the Gulf of Mexico in 1990 as a replacement product for sand or cement bags that had been used for this purpose in the past.

PHOTO: ERCA
Weirs, serving as inlet and outlet controls for potential floodwaters, are protected from overtopping flows by concrete mats.
PHOTO: ERCA

Till notes that for the Hickahala Creek project, which took approximately two weeks to complete, the Submar mats have been a success. “We have had a number of high-water events since the Submar mats were installed, including Hurricane Katrina, and to the best of my knowledge, we have not had any further erosion or damage to the bank.”

Preparing for a 100-Year Flood
Even if water levels in the Little River in Essex, ON, reach the 100-year flood level, the residents of housing developments close by should be able to rest easy thanks to a project completed this past summer by the Essex Region Conservation Authority (ERCA).

The ERCA was established more than 30 years ago, in 1973, and has the mandate of managing natural resources in the Essex region. This is completed in partnership with the Province of Ontario and nine member municipalities, including the City of Windsor, which is a major center with a population exceeding 300,000 people. Windsor is located on the banks of the Detroit River and is directly across the river from the city of Detroit, MI.

Last summer’s project on the Little River involved lowering two sections of dikes to provide emergency overflows into parklands east of the dikes and south of the Little River Sewage Treatment Plant. The ERCA oversaw the project, which included constructing two weirs, one as an inlet for the potential floodwaters and one as an outlet. Paul Mourad, a watershed engineer with the ERCA, describes a weir as a section of berm that is cut down in elevation to allow water to flow over it at a desired flow rate.

“The Little River is one of the many water courses in our area that drains a fairly significant area into the mouth of Lake St. Clair,” explains Mourad. “On either side of the Little River are dikes, and the elevation of the dikes is at the 100-year-flood level for the area. We wanted to establish additional storage for floodwaters that would increase the detention time in the event of a flood. The weirs draw water into the storage area and allow us to release the volume through culverts over an extended time period.”

Mourad says that the ERCA was concerned about erosion of the weirs or berms caused by the quantity of flow and rate of velocity over top of the weirs. “With a velocity of 1 meter per second and flow of 19.4 cubic meters per second, we needed to stabilize the weirs, so we decided to go with concrete mats from International Erosion Control in West Lorne, Ontario.”

PHOTO: FASTDITCH
Broken lining allows water to leak from irrigation ditches.

The concrete mats are draped over the berms or weirs and are submerged into the water to create a stable structure. Both the inlet weir and the outlet weir required 65 meters (approximately 200 feet) of the concrete mats. “We started the project in the late spring of 2005, and the installation was done over the summer,” notes Mourad. “International Erosion Control Systems supplied the mats, and our contractor placed them with an excavator. On the river side of the weir, they were anchored in a shallow trench on the river bottom and backfilled with riprap. On the land side of the weir, the mats were anchored in a shallow trench at the toe of the slope and backfilled with a few feet of clay. A geotextile filter fabric was also used underneath the mats.”

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Once the mats were positioned, crews placed topsoil over top of the mats and planted a seed mix, which Mourad says germinated quickly and has already provided vegetation for a natural look.

The Little River project was part of a major Flood Control and Stormwater Management Program for the East Riverside planning area in Windsor and was designed and implemented jointly by the ERCA, the City of Windsor, and major developers in the area, including the consultant firm HGS Ltd. The ERCA was successful in obtaining $350,000 Canadian (approximately $300,000 US) in funding from the Ontario Provincial Government. Next Page >

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