March-April 2007

Stabilizing Channels and Streambanks

Options range from walls to concrete mats to channel liners and more.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Carol Brzozowski

Comments

When municipal officials in North Vancouver, BC, Canada, engage in streambank stabilization, they focus on ways to do so in a more environmentally sustainable manner. That’s because North Vancouver is home to about 23 salmon-bearing streams.

“The watersheds are small—about 7 to 15 hectares—but are still supporting native salmon populations,” says Richard Boase, North Vancouver environmental protection officer. “Our community is built in the middle of these, so the streams are suffering with everything associated with urbanization and damage being caused by all the peak flow disturbance,” he points out.

North Vancouver’s challenge is similar to that of many municipalities throughout North America: the need to stabilize streambanks and channels not only to address a specific erosion problem but also in response to urban development or redevelopment.

Hastings Creek is one of North Vancouver’s salmon-bearing streams that called for attention in 2005. Erosion had been occurring in the stream, which was beginning to meander closer to the backyards of private properties.

“The stream was in a dedicated park, so there was no machine access for more traditional types of riprap or other sorts of hard-armoring approaches,” says Boase. Such methods would typically require bank preparation and removal of existing vegetation, he adds.

Boase researched his options and chose Deltalok in an effort to find a solution. The system provides a vegetated face for such applications as bank protection. It consists of GTX bags filled with sand and soil, held together with Deltalok connectors to create an interlocking soil mass to encourage and maintain vegetation.

“We looked at the site and came up with the idea that this particular site would be a great application for the product in an urban environment where the stream is highly susceptible to urban peak flow problems and all of that associated with a lot of impervious surface area,” says Boase.

Some 1,500 Deltalok GTX bags were placed at two sites on the stream itself—one an area where private property was being threatened and another area where there was a historical pond feature that had developed a long time ago. The stream was cutting into the berm supporting the pond.

Photo: Penda Corp.
Repairing the seepage problem along the Animas Valley Consolidated Ditch

“If we didn’t do anything in terms of intervention, sooner or later we were going to lose the pond and have a fairly significant problem there,” notes Boase. “We used the product to completely rebuild the creek bank and at the same time shore up the area of the berm supporting the pond.”

Workers were able to transport the materials down into the stream and rebuild the bank from the bottom up, retaining existing vegetation in addition to being able to use plantings integral with the product. District workers planted three types of willow, using some seedlings in pots the size of a coffee cup, some in half-gallon pots, and rooted stakes that came six to a 1-gallon pail.

The stabilization of the two sections involved a wall measuring 6 feet by 30 feet at the site where the stream made a 90-degree turn and where streambank erosion was threatening private property loss, as well as another wall section measuring 3 feet by 15 feet.

The project took two weeks in September 2005, with the majority of the work being site preparation because workers had to conduct a fish salvage at both sites.

One of the more interesting challenges, Boase notes, was that crews had to work around a large tree stump that had fallen in the stream but became a feature of the stream that the district wanted to maintain. “We spent a fair bit of time drilling some holes and using some cable duckbill anchors to secure that thing in prior to starting to lay the bags in and around it,” he says. “We built the wall in and around this structure that was sticking out of the bank.”

Photo: Deltalok
Crews on the Hastings Creek project had to work around a fallen tree stump.

Boase explains that certain parts of North Vancouver can get close to 10 feet of rain between November and June. “We’ll have periods of prolonged and fairly intense storms that come through, so there are fairly significant flows. This has always made it a challenge for us in dealing with these urban streams.” But for most of the year, the streams are quiet, meandering, and beautiful, he says.

“And then the winter rainy season comes up and we’ve got 4 feet of water, full bank width rumbling down these sections, and we have to design for that,” he adds.

The project was treated as a pilot project and funded by Deltalok, which provided the product; Northwest Hydraulic Consultants, which drew up the report and provided the hydraulic design; and the district, which provided the soil and rock medium to fill the bags as well as installation labor.

It’s been more than a year since the project was completed, and to date Boase has been impressed. “It’s a great product to work with in difficult-access situations,” he says. “It preserves a lot of the existing important natural features of the stream.” He’s also impressed with its looks: The stream is in a park setting, and there was virtually a closed canopy over the creek in just a year’s time.

“We were able to get noticeable growth,” Boase says. “The willow is doing well in the lower-light conditions. The main test is going to be whether the section of bank holds out over the longer term. If we can get 20 years out of it, that would be a satisfactory installation, because a lot of other things are going to happen in these urban streams over that time period.”

Saving Creekside Property
In San Rafael, CA, streambank erosion in Mahon Creek was causing much consternation for a homeowner whose property abutted the creek. San Rafael officials got permission from the US Army Corps of Engineers to do emergency repairs, because the homeowner was about to lose a wall and much of the property.

Steven Zeiger, senior associate engineer and stormwater program manager for San Rafael, says the city needed to do something to stop the erosion, because Mahon Creek takes in a lot of water from an upstream watershed. But the city couldn’t do “just anything.”

“The new rules here with Phase II [of the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System] are you can’t just put anything you want like riprap in there—you’ve got to bioengineer something,” says Zeiger. “We called Matterhorn to do both projects.”

Matterhorn California had done a previous streambank stabilization project for San Rafael, with which Zeiger was pleased. The company’s Gravity Living Retaining Walls are an embankment stabilization system made of interlocking precast concrete modules that provide pockets for stone, soil, and vegetation. Coated Helix Anchors are used to replace poured concrete piers in wall foundations. Precast blocks are connected by a synthetic cord. 

For this project, San Rafael used Matterhorn’s Secura Slope. Matterhorn, which manufactures the precast concrete modules, engineers installations, and installs the product, was the prime contractor on the Mahon Creek project. 

“Mahon Creek is tidal—the level rises and falls with the adjoining San Francisco Bay, 7 feet twice daily,” explains Matterhorn’s owner, Phil Zeidman. He says the bank was fenced and heavily landscaped with mature trees and shrubs for the parking lot of the adjacent building.

“We could not enter from the parking lot,” he says. “We had to build the retaining wall from the creek, which is about 60 feet wide.” The wall Matterhorn built is 100 feet long and 8 feet tall.

“We opted for a floating work platform of 4- by 8- by 3-foot-thick Styrofoam blocks with a plywood top,” Zeidman says. “We drove two half-inch rebar through each of 10 blocks so they could ride the tide. We lashed them loosely together and to the bank.”

Advertisement

To protect the creek environment, Matterhorn installed studded T-fence posts and plywood along the proposed foundation edge. The company sandbagged the outside for additional protection and placed plastic sheeting inside to prevent leakage of the concrete from the footing.

“We installed Helical Piers vertically at 5-foot centers and [Terratec] Helix tiebacks at 10-foot centers from the platform and from the bank at low tide,” Zeidman says. “Once they were in place with their caps, the reinforcing for the grade beam was installed and inspected.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

Post a Comment

Be the first to tell us what you think!

Post a Comment

Not a subscriber? Sign Up
 
 
*  
 




 

Get Erosion Control E-mail Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our Erosion Control e-mail newsletter!