September-October 2006

Sediment and Erosion Control on Construction Sites

A discussion of current practices.

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By Carol Brzozowski

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His company establishes special drainage details to handle water ponding on the lot and then slowly drain it off onto the streets like a miniature sedimentation trap. A variety of techniques and products is employed, including empty and filled poly and burlap gravel bags, Amoco woven and non-woven filter fabrics, coir and straw fiber rolls, Greenfix America straw and coir blankets, Enkamat Type C and 7000 Series blankets and liners, jute netting and visqueen fabric, ACF Environmental Siltsack and Dirtbag, Triangular Silt Dike, and Enviroberm.

Through his other company, Stormwater Compliance Specialists, Gentillon helps clients design post-construction measures to avoid problems down the road. He notes that enforcement of water-quality regulations has ramped up in the area.

“A number of different developers have been cited for improper management of their job site,” he says.

Sometimes erosion control to protect water quality takes place right on the water. This is often the situation for Tom Silva, president of Sterling Building Specialists in Destin, FL, a company with a focus to work on coastal soil erosion issues in places such as northwest Florida. The company favors the HESCO Bastion Concertainer for its work.

One job in which the company was involved featured 340 feet of beach that had sustained erosion from 80 feet to 16 feet since 2004, when a series of hurricanes passed through the area.

“The serious problem was the scouring of the waves as they were coming in from a southeasterly direction,” Silva points out.

What made the erosion particularly disconcerting was that on the other side of the 16 feet was a 6-foot deck and a 20-foot by 40-foot swimming pool, and 25 feet away from that was a building on spread footings; if the remaining 16 feet would have been lost and there was consistent wave action during a storm, the possibility of the pool moving northward through the building was very real.

A number of options were considered, including a solid wall construction, geotubes, and the HESCO Bastion system. The Concertainer is a prefabricated, multicell system constructed of galvanized steel Weldmesh and lined with nonwoven polypropylene geotextile.

The project engineer turned down the wall idea because of the fill that would be needed to add weight and the possibility of it coming into contact with the swimming pool; in addition, a large wave hitting the wall would take sand back with it into the water. The tubes were turned down out of concern they could tear.

While the HESCO Bastion system was more expensive from the outside, it was believed that it would have more staying power in the long run and be the best choice for this particular application, Silva says.

The HESCO Bastion system was chosen because it could be installed in a row-like, step-down fashion and tied together by rods through each corner and on the bottom, forming a cohesive unit.

Silva explains that each basket holds from 3,800 to 4,000 pounds of sand and, constructed in such a fashion, should not move. The baskets are drilled through in each corner and every 6 feet all the way through the back to accommodate water overflow. The project was completed in about 13 days.

Silva says the system is also aesthetically pleasing as the units are covered by sand and have the natural appearance of a dune. Even though that cover layer of sand might be lost in a storm, some 45% of it—the sand in the baskets—would still be retained.
“Since these are individual baskets, if a large piece of wood or something else were to hit an individual basket, you pull out four rods, replace the basket, fill it full of sand, and you are back in business,” he says.

There’s an added environmental benefit, Silva points out. The area has been a nesting place for animals and their habitat had been destroyed. “When you do something of this nature, you are trying to recreate this nesting place for these small creatures,” he says.
Some area residents, in reacting to beach erosion, have put up wood or concrete, something Silva notes is “not going to fly” with state environmental officials.
As for NPDES permit authority inspections, some erosion control specialists are seeing an increase, while others do not.

Bruce says permit authorities do not conduct inspections frequently enough.
“In our locale, they are ramping up, trying to get funding to do a better job,” he says. “It’s not that they are not doing a good job—they’re understaffed and there are too many projects.”

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Millward indicates more cities are starting to conduct inspections relating to NPDES. “Before, you saw very little enforcement, but now you are starting to see a lot more by the cities,” he says. “A couple of years ago, they might have done some enforcement if there was dirt in the streets. Now they are doing more enforcement before dirt gets into the street. It used to be less stringent; now they are issuing citations and fines, and you are finding a lot more cities getting involved in it,” he says.

“I think they are getting educated and find out the benefits of it, and they know what to do.”

Author's Bio: Carol Brzozowski is a journalist living in Coral Springs, FL.

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