May 2007

Preventing Bank Erosion

Retaining walls and bulkheads save creeks and lakeshores.

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By Janis Keating

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“We will hire civil, soils, and structural engineers and then go to the US Army Corps of Engineers, building departments, and flood departments and juggle all the paperwork and forms—because, if you don’t do such tasks every day of the week, you don’t get it done. So if you’re the homeowner, you can’t do it all.

“After they take on a job, some civil engineers will come to me and ask me to take the ball. For example, there’s a new paperwork hassle: California’s Department of Fish and Game once used the same form every other agency used. Now they have a different form, so you have to fill that out—we’re back to square one; we have to fill out forms for each regulatory player. Thankfully, after 20 years, we have the expertise and rapport with agencies—but such tasks are difficult for the average person. Of course, once you get permits, then comes the easy part of the job—fixing it! To be fair, though, years back, there were a lot of bad repairs done, so that’s why California has all the regulations.”

Reinforce the Alamo!
Vacaville’s January 2006 storm laid siege to Alamo Creek, which winds around the Hidden Acres mobile home park. The park’s new owner, Jim Wagar, knew he had to act.

“What happened with this creek was a progression over the many years; the prior owners didn’t maintain it,” Wagar says. “There was a gradual and consistent erosion of the soil and the bank. It was getting to a point, after we bought it, we knew this would become a problem. At certain points along the bank, where nine homes were located, the banks were steadily eroding, and we were concerned. The unusual storm, which brought torrents of water to the creek bed, did considerable damage. Rather than wait, we decided to be proactive—make it right from the get-go.”

Hidden Acres contains 52 homes on approximately 6.5 acres. An attractive subdivision of single-family homes leads to the park, which ends at a somewhat rural area. Alamo is a natural creek, not one designed for stormwater. “In fact, the creek doesn’t run year round, but during the rainy season it can get quite high. It was near the bank during that storm.”

Wagar consulted with between six and 10 soil engineers about his problem. “One particular engineer told us about Phil Zeidman and Matterhorn; after talking to quite a few different people, what he said just rang right—what he had to say about the retaining wall, how it works, exactly what it would solve. It sounded great to us.”

It turns out that Zeidman had a lot of experience with Alamo Creek. “From that wall, going south to San Pablo Bay, we’ve had a dozen jobs on that creek—behind houses, trailer parks, and city property. The January 2006 storm was perhaps a 50- to 100-year storm—way out of line from the usual. The major problem for the creek is development. Builders paved everything in sight. Therefore, 95% of the water from the sky goes down the creek. No one thought about creeks when making developments.”

Zeidman illustrates how much space a creek needs to handle a large volume of rainwater: “In one section of the creek, builders did take into account the force of rainwater and dug a larger space. Where the creek used to be 3 to 6 feet wide and 5 feet deep, it’s now 8 feet deep and 20 feet wide—and during the big storm that creek was filled to the limit.”

Matterhorn’s Secura Slope blocks were used to construct the retaining wall for Wagar’s project. “We lined the bed from Hidden Acres’ side of the creek and then backfilled the wall with soil so vegetation will grow back, which enables the creek to run effectively while it provides cover and shade for animals. Humans think it looks nice, too,” Zeidman says.

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“The slope has retaining walls only on our side of the creek,” Wagar says. “It’s a very impressive wall—we’re very happy with it. Zeidman’s going to put in one more for us farther down the creek. We’re going to have a landscaping company come out and put in some ivy to make the wall more ‘green friendly’ and to aid in erosion control of the very top. The ivy will be planted at the top and trail down the wall.”

How long will Wagar’s retaining wall remain standing? “Forever. Look at the walls the Romans built—they’re still up,” Zeidman chuckles. “Seriously, since we’ve been in business, we’ve never had a failure of our system.” 

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