May-June 2006

Fuid Design

Creating the right channel protection strategy for your site

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Tara Beecham

Comments


Political Considerations: A Vote for a Vegetated Channel
Aesthetics were very important for another ongoing project. Located in Santee, CA, the Forester Creek Improvement Project involves a bike trail that meanders alongside the entire length of a channel that drains a large watershed and stretches through downtown.

Photo:City of Austin
Combining hard and soft armor helped prevent washout at Halls Bayou.

“For the most part, the water channel is being widened, spreading the flow out. It’s going to be vegetated. We’re using freshwater marsh plants and some willow on the edges of the channel. It will look pretty natural when it’s finished,” says Keith Gallistel, project manager for design at San Diego–based Earth Tech Inc., adding that there is a trickle flow for most of the year, though the flow increases during the rainy season.

A large section of the site that is primarily used to convey water will be vegetated. “The plan was designed with articulated concrete block. It will allow vegetation to grow through the block,” says Gallistel, explaining that he selected Carlsbad, CA–based Soil Retention Products’ interlocking concrete block for use in the project. “The velocities are kept low because of the channel being a vegetated channel. The project was designed using metric measurements. I think we’re keeping the velocity down to 2 to 2.5 meters per second.”
Many underground utilities posed a challenge for the Forester Creek project. “The sanitary sewer ran in an area that would be widened for the creek and had to be relocated,” says Gallistel. “In several important places, it’s several hundred feet wide.”

Cost wasn’t a consideration in choosing the creek lining, but environmental policy had an effect on the choices made for channel protection. “It’s hard politically to build hard channels anymore,” says Gallistel, adding that funds were contributed for the project in return for making it a naturalized, vegetated channel. “Environmental concerns are such that it’s just out of the question.”

Channel protection is also often a concern for state transportation departments, particularly because of their occasional proximity to roadways. If the water can’t be moved from roadway expansions, flooding because of streambank erosion can pose a risk for motorists.

“At this time we usually recommend the use of wire-enclosed riprap for channels that receive heavy flows and high velocities. We are gradually recommending the use of available new products,” says Van Hoven. “Several years ago, we did a comparison between traditional riprap and synthetic liner for a high-velocity flow; the cost was about the same. We compared geogrid filled with gravel versus riprap and the cost did not vary.”

Photo: Soil Stabilization Products
Constructing an effective channel system at West Bouldin Creek

NMDOT’s policy requires a site’s developer to regulate its flow. “The policy at the department is for the developer to maintain the existing drainage condition and not allow any increase in runoff,” explains Van Hoven.

State and Military Requirements
Similarly to NMDOT, the Tennessee Department of Transportation studies a site’s shear stress and water velocity when determining the best channel protection method.

“Where turf reinforcement mats are used, an additional check is made of the adequacy of the unvegetated lining. In general, an unvegetated TRM cannot withstand a shear stress greater than 3.0 pounds per square foot,” says Kim Keelor, public information officer for the Tennessee Department of Transportation (TDOT) based in Nashville. “Since the vegetation should grow in within one to two seasons, the unvegetated liner may be checked using the two-year flow rate. In addition, since the roughness characteristics are different for an unvegetated liner, this check is performed using an unvegetated n-value.”  

When the check finds the shear stress will be greater than 3.0 pounds per square foot, she explains, the spreadsheet used by TDOT automatically selects a composite lining using both riprap and the TRM.

Advertisement

“The height of the riprap above the channel bottom will be equal to the two-year depth of flow on the riprap [using riprap n-values], and the overall flow characteristics in the channel are computed using the composite n-value,” explains Keelor. “Where the bed of the stream has exposed bedrock, it is assumed that the bottom of the channel will not be subject to significant erosion, and the designed lining will begin at the top of the rock layer.”

This flow depth is also calculated based on a composite n-value. 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!