September-October 2009

Slope Stabilization

Tackling projects from landfills to wildlife sanctuaries

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Stabilization Project

Photo: Rusk County

By Mary Ellen Hare

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Zimmer says the dam’s owner, Dairyland Power Cooperative, likes the work the students have done and has donated thousands of dollars toward the project.

Tourists Like Their Hillsides Green
Cambria, CA, a coastal town situated between San Luis Obispo and Big Sur, just south of the late Randolph Hearst’s “castle,” is environmentally conscious and concerned with aesthetics, according to William Kane, president and chief executive officer of Kane GeoTech. “It’s a tourist area,” he says.

Kane’s firm is an independent civil engineering consulting operation dealing with rockfall, debris flow, landslides, and soil stabilization issues. In Cambria, soil, trees, and boulders were tumbling down one of the slopes near the town and falling into the roadway. “It was a maintenance problem for the county and a safety issue,” Kane says. “We were contacted to come up with a plan to stabilize the slope and improve the looks of the site.”

In the past, the solution was often to apply concrete or shotcrete to the slope. “It is unsightly and expensive,” Kane says. ”Environmental concerns have pretty well stopped these kinds of projects from being built unless expensive measures are taken to sculpt the shotcrete to look similar to rock.”

Instead, Kane’s firm used Geobrugg’s TECCO Slope Stabilization System. “After cleaning, trimming, and leveling, the surface is covered by a very-high-strength steel-wire mesh tensioned by drilled soil nails or rock nails and spike plates. The mesh fits to the slope face, and in this way prevents slope failure and rocks from breaking out. TECCO steel wire is four times stronger than chain link and therefore doesn’t stretch with the load,” Kane says.

It took about a month to stabilize the 15,000-square-foot slope, which Kane says is 100 feet high. “The contractor first drilled holes in the slope, then installed threaded steel rods about 10 feet on center and grouted them in. TECCO mesh was then laid on the slope with the rods up through it. Then anchor plates were laid over the rods, nuts threaded on and torqued. This pulled the chain link against the slope and made it taut. It actively pushed on the loose rock and soil to contain it.”

Environmentally, the main advantages of TECCO are that it blends with the slope and is difficult to see. In addition, vegetation can grow up through it, further hiding it. “You just spray on hydroseed or put vegetation mats under the mesh. Eventually, you can’t even see the TECCO mesh,” Kane says.

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Brian McNeal, general manager for AIS Construction in Carpinteria, CA, did much of the site work at Cambria and says he has seen an upsurge in the use of the TECCO system over the past five years. He says AIS Construction has installed around a half a million square feet of TECCO mesh in North America, including Alaska, California, and Colorado. “All have been successful; there is little to no maintenance for the owners. In contrast, where only a draped twisted-wire mesh is applied, more maintenance is required. Draped wire mesh is a passive system. It is only a mesh curtain with anchors along the top, so that the rocks work their way down and must be handled by maintenance crews. TECCO is an active system: It is pinned and holds the mesh to the hillside, not allowing the rocks to come loose. You can work around trees and existing vegetation, and after a couple of years you don’t see the TECCO mesh at all.”

Installing TECCO at Cambria was a step-by-step process, according to McNeal. “First, we scaled off the precariously perched rocks for worker safety, and then we laid out the anchor pattern in 10- by 10-foot diamond pattern. If the area had a deep ridge or peak, we installed an anchor in the valleys to keep the mesh close. We drilled the anchors from the top down, installing them with cement grout, and tested them for pullout strength. Then we dug 18-inch-by-1-foot-deep pockets around each anchor, working from the top down vertically across the slope. We installed the TECCO mesh using our crane. Sometimes we can use a helicopter if there are no power lines above us. Next, we secured the top of the mesh to the anchors and rolled it down the hill using a crane with a bar going through the center, much like a paper towel roll. As it rolls down, we have two men on ropes rappelling beside it so we can keep it lined up with the anchors.” Next Page >

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