May-June 2000

Leaving Little Trace With Degradable Erosion Control Solutions

In the realm of rolled erosion control products, completely degradable solutions are gaining ground. More manufacturers are producing them, and on some projects, environmental or safety concerns make them a necessity. More often, however, they are being used in conjunction with more permanent solutions.

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By Janice Kaspersen

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"I've seen some of the degradable fasteners but never really used them because I've never perceived a problem with using the steel pins," Hurt continues. "We have done projects in public parks where there are safety issues with the steel pins, and in those cases we go with wood stakes and have been pretty happy with those. In my experience it tends to be fairly difficult to mow over these geotextiles anyway unless the installation is absolutely perfect, because the actual fabric itself tends to want to get up and into the mowers. One of the nice things about some of these [degradable] products, especially the woven products, is that they lie tighter on the ground. As they degrade, they just sort of turn into dirt, as opposed to the ones with the plastic netting, which are a mower's nightmare."

Softer Solutions

Beyond safety, cost, and specific wildlife concerns, degradable solutions seem enjoy a better image with some, while others are wary of their effectiveness. "Most regulatory agencies we deal with are much more amenable to a softer, biological, environmentally sensitive approach rather than a hardscape with gabions, riprap, or concrete or seawall or something like that. They look much more favorably on projects that incorporate a softer solution," says Swain of The Dawson Corporation.

Samson sees the degradable products catching on because of how they drape when installed, making them ideal for uneven surfaces. "I think it's a trend. You'll see even urban landscape architects are probably going to use more irregular berms and boulder groupings."

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"I think there are different camps among the designers," observes Hurt. "With a degradable solution there's always a degree of risk involved; somewhere down the line something will come along that disturbs the vegetation, and then you're left with a relatively unprotected area. If you go in with a permanent physical barrier, you at least have the synthetic to hold the soil in place until new vegetation establishes. So it's a trade-off between the degradable products, which offer a much more pleasing aesthetic and environmentally conscious project, and the degree of assurance that a synthetic product's going to provide." To some, he says, the risk of unexpected subsurface conditions and unforeseeable weather extremes "kind of makes it worthwhile overdesigning and overconstructing the thing, using a one-grade-higher product than what you'd expect the project to require, just to be safe."

Of nondegradable geosynthetics, says Swain, "There's a ton of stuff out there that will do a very good job of holding the soil. But it's going to be there forever, and you could have potential problems down the road depending on the application." For some jobs, he allows, geosynthetics are ideal. "If you're trying to stabilize something and build a road or a parking lot on it, engineering fabric is the way to go. But in a bioengineered solution, we always try to opt for a biodegradable product. Biodegradable products and a bioengineered solution are not a panacea for every single application, either. Where the erosion or the force of the stream or the ocean is just too great, you have to go with a more engineered solution. You have to know the elements that you're dealing with and design accordingly."


Author's Bio: Janice Kaspersen is the editor of Erosion Control magazine.

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