March-April 2010

Channel Linings

Flexible and durable options

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Photo: George and Lynch Inc.

By Janet Arid

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Not too long ago, poured concrete and stone masonry were about the only choices engineers had when they needed to stabilize banks and prevent erosion in channels with high shear stresses. They succeed, but at a cost: Because they don’t allow stormwater to infiltrate into the soil, contaminants are carried along with the water to the outfalls, which often face greater erosion problems than the channels themselves because of the velocity the stormwater has built up along the way. In addition, these channels can look unnatural and interfere with wildlife habitat.

Engineers still determine the most appropriate channel lining based on the volume and velocity of stormwater in a given time frame, as well as the soil type, slope, and size of the site. However, a considerable amount of research and development has taken place through the years, and it’s given them a wide variety of choices to work with.

“There are appropriate solutions to any erosion control project,” says Patrick Dayan, an engineer with Miller Legg, a statewide consulting firm headquartered in Pembroke Pines, FL. “But there are also unknowns, such as site constraints, that drive the project at hand. Sometimes your vision gets shifted.”

Photo: George and Lynch Inc.
The shallow slopes at this site made
Cable Concrete a natural choice.
Photo: Miller Legg
UltraFlex mats are installed over the geotextile in the Verada channel.

Among the effective solutions are articulated concrete block (ACB) and cellular confinement systems. They stabilize the channel, slow the velocity of stormwater, and prevent erosion, even in high-velocity channels, as well as allowing water to move between the surface and the subgrade and letting vegetation to grow through them. They’re also flexible, resistant to freeze-thaw cycles, and aesthetically pleasing, and they allow for animal habitat. At the same time, they need little or no maintenance—they may need to be mowed occasionally—and can withstand being driven on. They all work best installed over a permeable geotextile.

Veronica Foster, senior engineer at Golder Associates Inc. in Mt. Laurel, NJ, has been specializing in this area for more than 10 years. “We know products of this nature have a proven record of working effectively,” she says.

Concrete block systems are blocks of either open or closed cells that form a mat. The mats are connected by cables or ropes, which give them their flexibility. Open cells and the spaces between the mats allow water to permeate, soil to infill, and vegetation to grow.

Cellular confinement systems are made of three-dimensional cells that can be filled with soil, aggregate, or poured concrete, depending on the requirements of the project. When they’re filled with aggregate—either as part of the landscape design or in arid areas where vegetation may not grow—or with soil, water infiltrates freely, but the soil or aggregate is confined in the cells. Filled with poured concrete, they provide a durable surface as well as a flexible slab.

Open-cell ACB and cellular confinement systems can be filled with soil and seeded during the project, or they can be left to fill with soil as sediment washes into them during rain events and reseed naturally. As vegetation grows through them, its roots anchor the system.

“The industry is developing so quickly, and there is such a wide range of products, including ‘green’ products,” Foster says. “One of the biggest challenges we face as designers is staying up to date about the wide varieties of materials that are available to us.”

Advertisement

Equalizer Channel and Retention Ponds
Not far from the stands in Legends Field in Tampa, FL, home to the New York Yankees during spring training, an equalizer channel joins two retention ponds.

Although they’re beautiful to look at, the work wasn’t done for the thousands of Yankees fans that come from across the country to watch their favorite team. Severe erosion was occurring in the channel and the ponds, says James Griffin, vice president of Bio Mass Tech Inc., the environmental consulting and construction firm that restored the slopes in the summer of 2007. Next Page >

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