May-June 2006

Fuid Design

Creating the right channel protection strategy for your site

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By Tara Beecham

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Preserving Turkey Creek
Flood control while maintaining a natural aesthetic can be a concern with channel protection. The project at Turkey Creek, a waterway along Interstate 35 in Kansas City, KS, in an area that has flooded sporadically for the past 100 years, was one such example.

Geotextile fabric protects the channel in areas of less shear stress.

“They have taken a smaller channel and created a much larger channel. The political process was more of the challenge than anything,” says John Kahl, the project manager and also the president of Terra Technologies based in Overland Park, KS, referring to selling the concept.

Several organizations were involved with the project, begun at the time I-35 was being widened.

“We were working as a subconsultant to HNTB,” says Kahl. “While the erosion control applications were designed by Terra Technologies Inc., HNTB had the overall design responsibility for the project. The US Army Corps of Engineers funded the channel design, but the Kansas Department of Transportation is constructing and funding this phase of the flood control improvements. We’re all working collectively.”

Schrimpf Landscaping of Jefferson City, MO, was the contractor that constructed the erosion control applications, and is working as a subcontractor of Kansas City, MO–based Clarkson Construction Co.

The Environmental Protection Agency voiced concern over the Army Corps’ initial plan, which called for hard armor, mostly riprap, says Kahl. “They wanted to do something to retain or restore or enhance the natural qualities of the area,” he says. In places, Turkey Creek had to be moved 40 to 50 feet from its prior location because of the I-35 expansion, and the channel had to be bigger and deeper than it was initially. Kahl explained that in constructing the necessary flood control, riparian systems, trees, and grass had to be initially stripped from the site. It was important, he notes, for the channel protection design to also put something back into the environment.

After studying the combination of soils in the area and channel hydraulic modeling, the company used monofilament turf reinforcement mats (TRMs) by Colbond with North American headquarters in Enka, NC. The company’s Enkamat products feature polyamide filaments that are connected, with 95% of the matrix that is created being open space for plant roots to thrive and become entwined with the TRM, further stabilizing the cover.

Photo: Terra Technologies
The Turkey Creek flood control project took place during the widening of an adjacent interstate highway.

“It produced effective erosion control for both the short and the long term and provides long-term support to the soil system,” says Kahl. “What we like most about it is that it doesn’t impede vegetation. It’s black and it absorbs heat from the sunshine so it extends the germination cycle.” This was helpful also because approximately 20 acres were seeded with native grasses, which tend to be sensitive to growing conditions, he says.

Installation of vegetation also included 30,000 containerized plants and plugs.

“In the zones of high shear, we specify high-tensile TRMs; in low shear, monofilament TRMs,” says Kahl, adding that in the latter case he used 70/20. “In zones of lower shear, we just seeded the areas and covered them with an erosion control blanket to provide coverage while the vegetation becomes established. The project entails the use of 49,346 square yards of erosion control blanket, 8,608 square yards of TRM, and 11,865 square yards of high-tensile TRM.”

Additionally, thetoe of the slope stabilization covered only by the erosion control blanket was managed by the use of approximately 2,000 linear feet of coir logs.

The watershed itself remains fully developed, but the existing channel “behaved differently than this constructed improvement,” says Kahl.

A large amount of bedrock found during the excavation posed another challenge.

“At some point the sideslopes leave bedrock and go back into soils,” says Kahl, who adds that the soil has become very thin, making it difficult to reinforce with vegetation-dependent systems. “So we constructed a gabion basket right at the edge of that. Above the gabion basket, we worked with the TRM. The gabion resists erosion for the first 3 feet of the application; then once the gabion stops, you have at least 3 feet of soil behind the gabion that we can count on to hold or resist erosion.”

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The contractor is required to maintain the site for one year, “culling and controlling undesirable volunteer vegetation to expedite the establishment of the designed vegetation,” explains Kahl.

“This phase of the channel project is approximately 5,200 feet in length,” he says, referring to the part of the project with which his company was involved. “This is the largest biotechnical stabilization project of which I am aware from the perspective of total quantity of engineered materials utilized with a constructed cost of approximately $1.3 million for the biotechnical applications. This cost does not include consideration for the excavation and embankment required to configure the channel that is to be biotechnically stabilized.” The overall project is expected to continue for several years. Next Page >

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