March-April 2007

Construction-Site Stabilization

Preventing the loss of a landscape

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By Tara Beecham

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The company installed the fencing with the Burchland Manufacturing Silt Fence Installer. “I feel the ability to install unheard-of footages in a single day that we would never have been able to do with the trench-and-backfill method,” says Kuda. “Once the fabric is plowed in and compacted, it is most durable and resistant against washouts in high-flow, concentrated areas of concern. We typically space our stakes 4 to 5 feet and staple a lath on every stake to ensure the fabric has long-lasting durability and will not be blown down in rain and wind. The only way it falls is by being driven through by various careless people who don’t know what its importance is.”

Photo: Soil-Tek
Steep slopes were a challenge on an Iowa Speedway project.

At the Lisle project, a row of silt fencing was installed around the project’s dirt stockpile to prevent washout into nearby curbs, inlets, and a high-traffic street.

“We also installed inlet protection with silt fencing and inlet fabric, woven monofilament fabric tucked in and around the inlet cover,” explains Kuda. “Alessio Brothers Excavating graded areas of concern in stages while we installed other BMPs, [including] wattles, excelsior logs, blankets, and inlet protectors.”

Inspections were conducted every seven days during construction and within 24 hours of a rain event greater than 0.5 inch.

Compliance issues that arise during the construction process itself require a speedy response, and keeping the construction process moving can be a concern.

In the process of blasting through layers of rock to excavate a detention basin in 2005 at the Boulder Business Park outside of Allentown, PA, workers with Whiting Turner encountered groundwater contaminated with fine coal sediment. They sought a way to isolate this water from a nearby stream.

“They ran into some coal that wasn’t anticipated,” says Warren Cohn, the Certified Professional in Erosion and Sediment Control (CPESC) state representative for Pennsylvania and also a BMP product specialist at Norristown, PA–based ACF Environmental. “The basin ultimately was to be lined. The idea was that they were going to dig the basin and line it with the liner. The coal, if they let it sit there, would have settled out.”

The fine coal particles proved a difficult material to filter at the site. The filter bags initially installed at the site didn’t work, and the dark water began to flow into a clean stream serving as a wildlife habitat. Regulators shut the site down while the coal was removed from the pond, explains Cohn, and adequate protection was put into place.

“The particles were too small to be mechanically trapped by the filter,” he says. Profile Products’ Terra-Tubes, knitted tubes containing engineered composites of manmade and wood fibers, as well as performance-enhancing polymers, were eventually selected to remove the coal. “The Terra-Tubes allow the particles to cluster together and facilitated the flocculation and capture of the clustered particles.”

The channel connecting the detention basin was lined with a geotextile fabric, and stones ranging from 1.5 to 4 inches in diameter were set into place to help with water filtration at the site.

Two tiers of 6.5-foot Terra-Tubes were staked by contractors at several intervals along the channel, and within days the tubes were filtering coal.

“It was phenomenal,” says Cohn.

Residential Construction-Site Stability
In August 2006, the type of soil present onsite posed a sediment control challenge at a future housing development in Twinsburg, OH.

“This basically was a reclamation project. We did all this work in order to bring this site into compliance with the EPA,” says Nick Strazar, general manager of Certified Erosion Control of Northeast Ohio, noting that of the site’s 70 acres, about 50 were disturbed and the topsoil was completely stripped. “The soil didn’t have a lot of nutrients. It was in a sensitive area. It bordered a creek called Tinkers Creek.”

Photo: Oregon DOT
Site stabilization tools used on Oregon’s Columbia River Highway–widening project included matting, straw wattles, and compost.

The treatment approach involved a combination of practices to filter sediment from the stormwater as well as prevent erosion, including the use of SiltSoxx from Filtrexx International at the shoulder of slopes. Treatment also included rock checks, turf reinforcement mats, proper grading practices, temporary and permanent seeding, and Filtrexx FilterSoxx. The site was graded in stages. The company worked with Tri-Mor Construction during the installation of the rock checks and riser pipes and during the final grading.

“We worked with the developer to sequence all activity on the project. They had all the heavy equipment,” says Strazar. “We coordinated with them what was going to be done at what point.”

Filtrexx compost blankets were used to protect the perennial grass mix planted for erosion protection. The blankets were placed close to outlet structures on the site and its detention pond.

“They’re hard areas to get to vegetate sometimes,” says Strazar. “We installed what we call a Filtrexx FilterCell for sediment pond overflow. We perform weekly site inspections or after every half-inch rain event.”

Compost 2 inches thick was placed in some of the areas as a Filtrexx compost blanketwas used in an attempt to grow grass quickly for soil stabilization at a difficult time of year.

“August was a very hard time of year to get this done,” notes Strazar. “The seed germinated very quickly; I think it was within five days to a week.”

Certified Erosion Control (CEC) uses an electronic stormwater pollution prevention plan (SWPPP)inspection system, allowing access to all parties with permission.

“As a service, CEC provided weekly inspections during the process and kept local inspectors informed by sending electronic copies of the inspections to the county inspectors for their review,” explains Rod Tyler, chief executive officer of Filtrexx. “In addition, CEC attended meetings with Tri-Mor during biweekly meetings with the county inspectors to make sure questions about products were answered.

Photo: River Valley Organics
Installation of a compost blanket with seed along Pennsylvania’s storm-eroded Route 222

“The CEC inspection program allows permission to be granted to people like local inspectors, so they can check on progress at the sites without actually being there weekly or after each rain event. Inspections are kept in a virtual ‘notebook’ online and can be reviewed as historical documents, or to see what efforts have been taken since the last inspection, if work orders are generated. The system helps alleviate problems associated with having only one master copy of the SWPPPat the job site trailer, and provides great insurance if and when that document mysteriously disappears.”

A combination of materials, including bonded fiber matrix and hydrostraw, helped prevent erosion and control sediment during the construction of 3,000 acres of a partially developed golf resort community called Diablo Grande near Patterson, CA.

“I worked with TRM [turf reinforcement mats] to stabilize the swales,” explains Lucinda Dustin, a senior stormwater management consultant with Stevens, Ferrone & Bailey based in Concord, CA. She also used an Ertech Perimeter Guard in place of straw wattles, utilizing its plastic construction with a plastic filter. “They are lightweight; they are reusable. I used them in the areas where they were constructing homes. There is a lot of traffic. Straw wattles tend to get destroyed really easily in that situation.” The site will be home to a hotel and two 18-hole golf courses. “Everything we do there has to be very specific. We don’t take chances with discharge. It’s highly visible and a very high-profile project,” says Dustin. “They are going to spend $2 million or $3 million just on stabilization.”

Photo: Oregon DOT
Spraying compost material to prevent sediment loss in Oregon

Dustin has worked on the project for five years, and she has seen it graded in stages. “During Phase I, they had to build a 3.2-mile parkway to get to it. It’s in a canyon,” she says. “They also put in a 10-mile sewer line. Literally, we’re building a town.

“The site is crisscrossed with all kinds of waterways. We can’t discharge anything into the waterways.”

ACF Environmental Siltsacks and Earth Saver straw wattles were also installed at the site. Primarily self-contained and set apart from urban areas, Diablo Grande doesn’t have the same post-construction requirements as many other projects.

Another project Dustin worked on that required massive erosion and sediment controls during its construction was the 20-acre Calistoga Ranch in California’s wine country. The ranch is located in a 160-acre watershed, and more than $4 million were spent on the project’s stormwater management program.

“It’s in the bottom of a canyon. In winter, you can see waterfalls created when the rain comes,” says Dustin, adding that the site’s Biter Creek empties into the Napa River.

“When it rains and the creek fills, there are places where that creek is probably 8 to 10 feet deep. By May, it will be bone dry.”

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Regulations governing the protection of the Napa River limited the amount of time construction could take place on the site. Working mostly during the winter months, site workers used special inlet bags in the site’s storm drains.

“I created special devices that would retain sediment and hydrocarbons from entering the storm system,” says Dustin. “Storm drains go directly into the creek. We can’t allow anything that’s going to be a disturbance.” Next Page >

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