March-April 2007

Construction-Site Stabilization

Preventing the loss of a landscape

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By Tara Beecham

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Dustin also used ACF Siltsacks in the storm drains and Earth Saver straw wattles on the site’s slopes.

“You can leave [the wattles] there after the vegetation ends. I used them particularly on the longer slopes because they are easier to work with and they are very effective,” says Dustin. “They really just blend into the whole slope area.”

The entire creek length was vegetated with a native mix and protected with a bonded fiber matrix, stabilizing the banks for years to come.

Stabilizing Roads Under Construction
Roadway construction can introduce various sediment control concerns amid pressing deadlines.          

Just outside of Reading, PA, a roadway severely eroded by storms was the focus of a project approached by Doug Caldwell, president of River Valley Organics based in Wrightsville, PA. Begun in May 2004, the project along Route 222 was completed in about two weeks. Along with a short time frame, workers encountered poor soil and steep slopes.

“We netted the slope first, and then we applied compost to the slope. We used Filtrexx LockDown Netting as well as FilterSoxx,” says Caldwell. “We had applied a compost blanket with seed.”

It was essential to protect the annual rye and crown vetch that was planted to prevent erosion and sediment loss. “Part of the challenge was to get grass to grow on it, because it was a cut-and-fill slope. It was a very large slope and very steep,” he notes. “It wasn’t possible to do any grading prior to the vegetation just because of the steepness of the slope or the relation to the highway.”

The company selected a Filtrexx compost blanket for an erosion control solution. “They couldn’t add topsoil to the slope because they would have to shut down a highway to do it. They needed to get grass growing on this slope,” explains Caldwell. “It had been seeded previously at least once and it had washed out severely.”

The work has held up well during a very severe rainfall after the installation with no washout, according to Caldwell.

During a project to widen the lower Columbia River Highway at Carlson Road in Columbia County, OR, the Oregon Department of Transportation (ODOT) needed to take steps to prevent sediment loss and implement erosion control measures. The road had steep slopes, at least 2:1 in parts, and a combination of materials was needed for the job, including silt fence, straw wattles, and erosion control blankets.

“We also sprayed on compost material, and then later it was temporarily seeded and the slopes were seeded in,” explains Mark Beeson, an ODOT project manager working in the Portland area.

Photo: Ciba Specialty Chemicals
Dredging in the settling area during the
second phase of Florida’s reservoir project

Rob Wattman, the ODOT project coordinator, explains that the temporary seeding was done initially. “We had to kind of over-winter the job,” he says. “That seed didn’t establish itself. The grass didn’t grow back fast enough and thick enough.”

ODOT workers returned in the early spring, implementing permanent seeding with perennial grasses. The site itself was graded in stages, and measures were taken to cope with the heavy rains the area experiences.

“There is also a guardrail that has a drainage curb. They made a rock channel. It was transverse to roadway,” says Wattman. “We built a channel for the water to go down. It was just rock, 3-inch to 5-inch size: a riprap-lined ditch.”

Some roadways handle traffic of a different kind, while facing the same challenges of nature.

Steep slopes provided the biggest challenge for Soil-Tek workers at the Iowa Speedway in Newton, IA. Begun in June 2005, the approximately 225-acre project continues to be inspected, and the speedway will eventually be used for Busch and NASCAR racing.

“We were contracted to manage the stormwater pollution prevention plan,” says Brian Denham, general manager at Des Moines, IA–based Soil-Tek, who was directly involved with the project. “While onsite, the different erosion control methods used were Filtrexx FilterSoxx, Burchland Manufacturing silt fence, erosion control blankets, and single-net straw blankets for slopes.”

Another challenge was to ensure Soil-Tek had resources ready, both staff and equipment, according to Denham, to provide next-day service to its client at the site. Like the racecar drivers, they understood the need for speed.

“That site, for the most part, was graded all at once,” he says, adding there were some 2:1 slopes. “We worked exactly with the grading contractor. If they were grading, we’d be there the next day to put in the erosion control practices.”

Although it was inspected weekly, when a half-inch or greater rain event occurred, the site was inspected within 24 hours.

Photo: River Valley Organics
Crews faced poor soil and steep slopes on Route 222 in Pennsylvania.

“We did seeding and fertilizing with that as well. There were different seeding methods used. There was a little bit of annual with the permanent seed mix. We put a grass that would come up right away,” says Denham. “We used seed fertilizer and straw mulch and hydroseeding using wood fiber. Using hydroseeding, we used a bonded fiber matrix. There are detention basins that we had to go back and seed and mat all the way around.”

The vegetation successfully stabilized the soil. “All the measures that we used on that project worked very, very well,” says Denham. “We felt comfortable with the outcome.”

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Keeping Storm Drains Clear
Filtration blocks played a role in sediment control at an ongoing construction site in Loveland, CO, about 7 miles south of Fort Collins. Begun in 1998, the approximately 450-acre residential development will endure construction work for the next four to five years.

Milk crates full of rock, straw wattles, and pulling the sediment from the storm drain itself were methods all tried before the construction company found Newbury Park, CA–based Eco-Blok’s filtration blocks and barriers. John Giuliano, president of Giuliano and Father Construction Co. based in Fort Collins, CO, devised the stormwater management program for the site, which included placing the filtration blocks around the storm drainage boxes.   Next Page >

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