Finding
an environmentally friendly erosion control solution can be particularly
difficult when the earth itself seems to be working against you.
The
choice of slope protection techniques can be influenced by budget, the soil, and
the steepness of the slope itself. But developers are finding innovative ways to
battle the age-old problem of stabilizing steep slopes in challenging
situations, while softening the edges of their work, either through revegetation
or with products that display a strong, natural aesthetic.
Whether
they are intended to prevent sediment from sliding into a waterway or protect
motorists on a busy tourist highway from falling rock, the projects highlighted
here all employ environmentally sensitive, long-term slope stabilization
practices. Though they are located in various parts of the country, the goal for
each project was the same: create or employ a system that will stabilize the
site for many years to come, while making the most of the site’s natural
attributes.
Highway
Development Challenges
Stabilizing
slopes beside highways can be challenging. Traffic looms nearby, and even though
people will be passing the site at high speeds, aesthetics must be balanced with
function because the end result will be so visible. Add the potential for
falling rock into the mix, and what would be an everyday challenge for an
erosion control company suddenly becomes more intense.
In
scenic Oak Creek Canyon, located between Sedona and Flagstaff, AZ, one such a
highway project faced challenges from the beginning, in August 2007, posed by
falling rock from above as well as the traffic below.
Jim
Monnett, a project supervisor consultant for the Arizona Department of
Transportation and a senior project supervisor and materials specialist for
AMEC, explains that the site featuring a conglomerate of boulders and sandy
material is based in a telluvian slope with about a 35-degree
angle.
“The
rocks from the volcanic layers up above come down into the road. It was a hazard
to traffic and hikers,” he says. The project had plenty of challenges: “It was
in live traffic. Half the road was shut down. There was always the potential of
boulders coming down. We had to build a rock-retaining fence. It flooded a
couple times.”
Set
within the Coconino National Forest, Oak Creek Canyon is a magnet for tourists
who come to fish, camp, hike, and enjoy a scenic drive through the area’s
natural beauty. Any product added to the site needed to blend in with the red
rock surroundings, while completely exposed to the big sky that frames the
area.
The
prime contractor, DBM, had worked with San Juan Capistrano, CA–based
Boulderscape in the past. The company offered a product with the natural
aesthetic desired for the site.
“The
Forest Service wanted to drive by and not really see it,” says
Monnett.
Boulderscape
installs soil-nail walls faced with a structural shotcrete material. The
micropile was made of high-strength steel structural and vertical beams and the
anchors used were 130 feet long. While challenging, this type of an intense,
stable system is common for Boulderscape, a company that is often called in to
make stabilization systems appear so natural that passersby don’t even notice
any such improvements have been made.
 |
Photo: Arizona DOT |
Construction crew working on the anchors of the Oak Creek Canyon
walls |
“Beams
connected all this together,” explains Monnett. “The anchors were on different
spray and angles to get good embedment into the lower sandstone
material.”
Working
with a $7.5 million budget for two walls, the project, a long-term instillation
solution, was created in a way that allowed maintenance to approach the site and
clear up boulders.
“The
wall was built upside down. You couldn’t remove all the material or the slope
would [crash down],” says Monnett. Material was removed as each section was
built. “We stabilized it in lifts from the top down. Each lift included a beam
with reinforcement and anchors tied together with that. The cables in the
anchors were stressed to over 100 kip loading and locked off to maintain that
pressure.”
The
Arizona Game and Fish Department approved a mix of native seed for the site
suited to the ecologically sensitive area.
“Any
area that was disturbed will be revegetated, other than the face of the wall
itself,” explains Monnett. “We had to be finished by April 1 because of the
spotted owls returning to their nests. They believe that the spotted owl is
nesting in the canyon.” The spotted owl is a federally listed threatened
species.
No
longer just loosely scattered to protect disturbed soil on construction sites,
straw can also be used as part of the process of long-term slope
stabilization.
The
California Department of Transportation (Caltrans) hired Selby’s Soil Erosion
Control Co. Inc. in June 2007 to control erosion on a 2:1 slope approximately
two and a half miles long on Pigeon Pass over Highway 84 from Pleasanton to
Livermore, CA, where a new highway was being developed.
“The
steepness definitely was a challenge,” says Dustin LaMantain of Selby’s, which
is based in New Castle, CA, with a satellite office in San Francisco. “The size
of the slope was a challenge as well.”
More
than 50 rows of Earth Saver fiber roll wattles were placed on the hard, sandy,
silty soil on the approximately 1,000-foot slope.
“We
dig a trench for the wattle, then set the wattle into the trench,” says
LaMantain, noting that biologists for the Caltrans District 4 region specified
all native seed used. “After vegetation has made its home on the slope, the
wattles are biodegradable.”
The
wattles will naturally reduce the rate of flow, as well as absorb water and
filter runoff. They will also help prevent any pollutants from the runoff from
reaching nearby surface waters.
Forty
percent of the ongoing project will be completed this year. It will take between
two to three years for the material in the roll to completely break down into
the slope, he says, and by then it will protect the soil enough for the
vegetation to take hold.
“We
don’t anticipate going back,” says LaMantain, referring to adding any additional
long-term soil protection. “On some of these areas what was [specified] was
seed. Hydrostraw was another application—mixed with seed, fertilizers, and
compost and sprayed on the slope.”
LaMantain
says Earth Saver’s recycled, naturally weed-free California rice straw wattles
were selected because they are the “top wattle in the
industry.”
“They’ve
gotten competitive in their pricing,” he says, “but they take the quality to a
different level.”
Adjusting
Instillation Techniques at a Commercial Site in the
South
A
developer based in Nashville, TN, sought to evacuate a hillside in an attempt to
gain enough flat land to create a new building for a national retail chain’s
store, says Frank Amend, a project engineer and southeastern United States
regional manager for Geobrugg North America, based in Rocky Mount,
NC.
“The
idea was to blast and remove material to leave a competent high wall,” says
Amend. “During the blasting process, over-blasting occurred that resulted in
severely fragmented vertical walls along a V-cut that already were sloughing
significant-sized rocks.”
While
mechanically stabilized earth walls and backfill were considered a solution,
they proved too expensive for the approximately $850,000 project that began in
January 2007 and lasted for five weeks. The developer also considered
shotcreting the entire face, but, Amend explains, this option was also
expensive, and a local forestry service agent sought a “greener” solution for
the site, which has native clay and shale soils. When Geobrugg North America was
contacted, company representatives suggested using a TECCO rockfall drape beside
one slope of the V-cut and a TECCO slope stabilizing system along the opposite
side’s high wall.
“The
upper TECCO soil nailed slope was 0.5 to 1 vertical, up to 23 feet tall,” says
Amend. “Rock slopes were up to 55 feet vertical.”
Accessing
the site was difficult, particularly during a significant portion of
crane-basket-only drilling and during the
instillation, says
Amend.
R.
Michael Bivens, a professional engineer for the site’s contractors Rembco
Geotechnical Contractors of Knoxville, TN, says a crane basket was specially
built for the job. A drill had to be directly mounted on the basket
itself.
“We
were able to put the drill basket in a few place we weren’t able to reach from
the ground,” says Bivens.
The
system was then hydroseeded, and the site now drains
naturally.
“Our
solutions yield much more visually pleasing results than the shotcreted area,”
says Amend, noting that the owner requested an area of shotcrete fill to solve
the problem of fragmented rocks on the high walls. “And they are less expensive
to install.”
Wave
Action Spurs Need for Slope Protection Beside
Shoreline
Few
elements can erode soil like water. Global warming is a hot topic when
discussing the causes of high tides, but there are a surprising number of causes
of shoreline erosion, and not all of them have natural causes such as heavy
rainfall or flooding. Sometimes it is manmade sources that cause the greatest
risk to lake shorelines.
Large
motorized boats caused huge wave action on the shoreline of David Gigure’s
property on Lake Viola in Webster, WI.
“It
started to cause shoreline erosion on our property,” he says. “We have a little
shelf that comes up from the water. It was being undercut 6 feet back. It was
just a matter of time before that whole thing collapsed.”
When
you live beside a protected lake, there are some restrictions on the erosion
control methods that you can use. Gigure says that under the Wisconsin
Department of Natural Resources requirements, he wasn’t permitted to use rock to
solve the erosion problem.
“It
had to be a natural material that would decompose and eventually disappear,” he
says. “This is one of the few lakes in northern Wisconsin that’s very clear.
They are trying to keep it as natural as possible.”
Gigure
says sugar sand made up the nearly 20% slope that needed protection. In October
2005, when the lake water was very high, he used ShoreSox to prevent further
erosion on the site. The product packages cornstalk fiber inside biodegradable,
lined burlap, combined with photodegradable mesh. The manufacturer uses
cornstalks that would otherwise be plowed under the Midwestern farmland, in
effect creating a second market for one crop.
Paul
Cook, a conservation specialist at the Burnett County Land and Water
Conservation Department based in Siren, WI, is familiar with the work done at
the site where he has monitored the shoreline periodically. Because the product
is biodegradable, he explained, no county permit was
required.
“The
rectangular shape of the modules themselves on this particular slope almost
created a terrace effect. That’s going to slow the water down some,” says Cook,
noting that in this respect ShoreSox placed on the bank of the hill helped slow
water velocity as well as filter the runoff. “It’s kind of an unintended
advantage of the product.”
Cook
compared ShoreSox against some other available products that could have been
used at the site.
“It’s
much cheaper than rock. It’s so much easier to install. You don’t have nearly
the amount of labor,” he says. “The product has a very good staking system.
Coconut or coir fiber logs have been used for years on similar sites; often
times they are staked in with duck anchors.”
Seasonal
factors can also affect erosion control product choice.
“Our
winter seasons are long. We get a lot of ice push,” says Dan Harrington of the
Department of Natural Resources based in Spooner, noting the ShoreSox seem to be
holding up well. “A lot of folks put rock or riprap along the
shorelines.”
At
many of those sites, he says, the riprap must be replaced over time.
It’s
important that a product’s anchoring system not be loose, which can happen with
some methods of erosion control if the product is poorly anchored or not
installed properly. ShoreSox uses a loop of photodegradable burlap through which
a stake is placed, anchoring the product to the ground and making it resistant
to wind and wave action.
“The
whole system will move a little bit, but it always seems to be where it’s
supposed to be,” says Cook. “I think the staking system is very good. These
products are local products. We don’t grow coconuts in
Wisconsin.”
The
modular system can follow the curves and uneven angles of a
shoreline.
While
people can insert plantings in material such as coir immediately, Cook advises
people wait before revegetating because the shredded cornstalks within the
ShoreSox begin decomposing as soon as they are installed.
“It’s
like a big bag of enclosed compost,” he says. “It generates a lot of heat, just
like any good compost pile would, particularly if it’s in a sun-exposed spot.
The shredded cornstalks need a little time.”
There
has been no further erosion at the site, Gigure says, since the project was
completed.
“It
also allowed the hillside to start growing natural plants,” says Gigure. “A lot
of the vegetation is coming back now, which will stabilize the shore and the
hill.”
Sedge
and irises were later planted at the site, completing the effect of a soft,
natural appearance beside the lake.
Subtle
Stabilization in a Residential Area
A
slope located near a creek bed at the Winding Walk subdivision, a Shea Homes
Community in Charlotte, NC, had been seeded and strawed twice, both times
unsuccessfully, in an effort to stabilize the slope. The summer heat,
threatening to challenge revegetation attempts, made a speedy solution for
sediment protection essential.
In
June 2007, the developer hired erosion control company Eco-FX, an affiliate of
SpreadRite Organics of the Carolinas based in Charlotte, to install a compost
blanket using the company’s pneumatic blower truck system. Shea Homes wanted
seed planted on the site to germinate quickly on the 3:1 slope in the mostly
clay to clay-loam soil. This would protect off site sediment from sliding into
the creek below.
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Photo: Arizona DOT |
Installing shotcrete facing over the soil-nail wall |
The
compost blanket, often used on sites with severe slopes, is composed of recycled
wood waste compost material, PAM-12, and Erosion Control Blend seed mix. The
blankets range in price from 19 cents to 28 cents per square foot depending on
volume.
“The
compost application encourages significantly improved seed germination by
amending the soil profile with important nutrients to the growing zone. The
compost blanket was chosen due to the rapid germination factor of the product,”
says J. R. Stewart of Eco-FX. “Compost is a recycled product that adds organic
value to the seeding application and helps increase water infiltration for rapid
germination. The compost also acts as an erosion control product prior to
germination, offering slope stabilization on the day of
installation.”
Germination
at the site took place within seven to 10 days following installation. “This is
exceptional considering the compost blanket was installed mid-summer, with daily
temperatures in the 80s to 90s,” says Stewart.
Excessive
heat didn’t slow the revegetation process, which was successful within the
development during the remainder of the long summer days.
Rodents
Threaten Slope Stability Near the Big Easy
New
York City may be famous for combating its rat population, but one Louisiana
parish has its own ongoing battle with nutria. The large aquatic rodents have
become more than an annoying pest in Jefferson Parish, a suburb of New Orleans,
as they have evolved into an erosion control problem. The animals burrow into
the canals and eat the roots of the vegetation that supports the
banks.
“They
multiply like rabbits. They adapt very well. Their only natural predator is
alligators,” explained Bill Duplaisir, assistant director of the Jefferson
Parish Drainage Department. “We have an open canal system, 340 miles of open
channel,” he says, noting that the rains cause the water in the canal to rise
and fall. “We get about 100 inches of rain a year on
average.”
The
department tries to prevent the nutria from attacking the canals and from
tunneling under roadways. The situation has gotten so desperate that the
sheriff’s office has a joint program with the Jefferson Parish Drainage
Department in which they organize people to actually go out and try to shoot the
nutria. In March 2007, the Jefferson Parish Drainage Department, open to ideas
to prevent damage to the sloping canal banks, tried a new
approach.
Workers
installed about 250 feet of Global
Material Technologies Xcluder GEO between two culverts along a canal as a test
to determine if the product could help protect the banks. The
stainless-steel-fiber-based geotextile is designed to prevent animals from
burrowing into the landscape. The material can be left in place indefinitely,
will not rust, and, if necessary, can be easily removed. Jefferson Parish
workers scraped the canal bank and installed the product, beginning at the
waterline and then proceeding up the bank’s approximately 1.5:1
slope.
“It
took a couple days. We did it with our in-house forces and equipment,” says
Duplaisir. A thin layer of soil was then placed over the Xcluder GEO, and the
area was seeded with Bermuda grass.
“It
grows about 12 inches,” says Duplaisir of the choice. “We cut it before it gets
to that height.”
The
site was monitored for both nutria activity and grass re-growth. Jefferson
Parish officials noted that the grass successfully grew again in the problem
area and the bank was restored to the way it appeared prior to the geotextile
instillation. No nutria activity has been observed at the site since the Xcluder
GEO instillation.
“The
material worked,” says Duplaisir, adding, however, that the nutria moved further
down the bank and the battle will continue. “It would work for us [again] in
specific problem areas, such as in between two culverts.”
Natural-looking
erosion control methods like this one are becoming more and more common on slope
stabilization sites across the country. This is because products that work with
nature and products that encourage the growth of native revegetation can help
reign in the costs of slope stabilization over the long run, as well as enhance
a site’s aesthetic appeal.