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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“Where the composite channel will consist of rock and TRMs, riprap may also be added up to the two-year flow depth,” notes Keelor, “if it is found that the shear for the two-year flow rate on the unvegetated TRM will exceed 3.0 pounds per square foot.”

Maine’s Department of Environmental Protection encourages the use of an erosion control blanket at the base of a ditch or swale, at least for as long as it takes for vegetation to become established.

Normal-condition nonwoven geotextiles, which are often characterized by their good permeability, are recommended for erosion prevention when the material will not be lowered more than 5 feet onto the geotextile, when there are no sharp or angular aggregates used, and as long as the trench depth isn’t more than 10 feet, as outlined in the organization’s publication “Maine Erosion and Sediment Control BMPs.” When trenches are deeper than 10 feet or angular sharp aggregates are used, the organization recommends using heavier geotextiles.

As state organizations move toward the future of channel control protection, additional considerations are being planned. One of these issues is water quality.

“We do design channels for the water quantity,” says Keelor. “We are not designing them for water quality at this moment. But soon we will.”

Military sites have entirely different issues to address regarding channel protection. A channel project has to be cost-effective for both the military and the land managers and endure heavy wheeled and tracked vehicles such as tanks and humvees, explains Heidi Howard, a natural resource specialist for the Army Corps of Engineers in Champaign, IL.

“We look at the soil properties, the hydraulic flows, what type of training takes place there,” she says, stressing that the corps also looks at the site’s relation to the local community. “We’re very conscientious of our neighbors, and we try to be really aware of soil erosion, wind erosion, noise control—that type of situation.”

Many times, hard armor is not a consideration because, with training activities taking place and possible ricochet potential, it becomes a safety matter.

Howard tends to favor soft armor for most military projects. “It tends to be reasonably priced,” she says. “[The military] has its own in-house labor that it can use to rehabilitate a site.

“We recently worked on a multipurpose training range at Camp Atterbury, Indiana. They had just recently constructed a training range. They experienced significant erosion on one of their stationary targetry berms. We helped them pick out a combination of erosion control blankets, some check dams.”

The site had a south-facing slope and some extreme conditions, posing considerable erosion control concerns. “They were never able to get proper vegetation established,” says Howard. “It didn’t have a good layer of topsoil.”

The site was revegetated with grasses, including fescues, native big blue, and buffalo grass, by hydroseeding because of its slope. The blankets used contained coconut fiber, says Howard, “and also we did a straw blanket.”

Another reason hard armor wasn’t a consideration for this site was because of a need not to increase the water’s flow rate.

The West Bouldin Creek project in Austin, TX, is an example of an effective channel system for a site with short-duration high flows. When the outer bank beside the creek, which is adjacent to a roadway, began to erode, threatening to compromise that roadway, Presto Products Co. provided preliminary design assistance to the Watershed Protection Department of the City of Austin, along with the Merced, CA–based Soil Stabilization Products Co., which offered the department product support. The final design included a Geoweb cellular confinement system, with a sand-colored face and openings that allowed for native shrub plantings for a natural look. The perforations in the Geoweb system also encourage root lock-up, stabilizing the vegetation while allowing drainage through the system, explains Patricia Stelter of Presto Products. Presto is a business of Alcoa that’s based in Appleton, WI.

Combining hard and soft armor was one way washout was prevented at the Halls Bayou project in Houston, according to Stelter. A combination of Geoweb systems was placed on the uppermost slopes and in a stacked configuration at the very bottom of the channel with the addition of concrete.

“The reason concrete was used in the bottom few cells was to prevent washout of infill,” says Stelter, noting that high flows occurred somewhat frequently. “Also, by using the stacked configuration with concrete as opposed to single layering in a trapezoidal-type channel, they were able to maintain the steeper vertical profile of the channel, limiting more land-use requirements.”

As site issues become more challenging, it’s important for an erosion control plan to grow with development.

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While water velocity and shear stress are key to determining appropriate channel protection, taking all a site’s needs into consideration when setting your channel protection strategy at a project’s outset can save time and money by completion.       



Author's Bio: Based in Morgantown, PA, Tara Beechman writes frequently for Forester publications

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