July-August 2008

Off the Level

Slope stabilization is a vital part of every construction project, but not every job is cookie cutter in its approach.

Article Tools

Create a Link to this Article

By Carol Brzozowski

Comments

The recipe, the ingredients and the tools needed to produce the finish product vary from site to site, taking into account degree of difficulty, locality and soil and rock conditions.

ime factors and a precarious space issue was what Extreme Technologies, Inc. (ETI) of Douglasville, GA, faced with a project at the Georgia Tech campus in Atlanta.

There, a 5,000-square-foot temporary shoring system along two roadways was needed for the installation of foundation walls for a new four-story nanotechnology research facility during the summer of 2006.

The facility was being built at a site that formerly housed a nuclear reactor and research facility, thus prompting the removal of nuclear and radioactive materials and setting the new project three months behind schedule.

Additionally, a variety of utilities inundated the site, including fiber optics and high-pressure steam lines, not to mention water, gas, and phone lines.

“No one knew exactly where they were, so that was a big issue,” notes Randy Greene, operations manager for ETI.

Photo: Geobrugg
A crew makes use of Geobrugg's TECCO mesh for a project on the campus of Georgia Tech.

And to make matters even more challenging, the general contractor realized the shoring of the roadside property lines were not in the plans or work scope. Consequently, time was of the essence for the project’s site work.

ETI won the contract to develop a plan for the temporary shoring and help compensate for lost time by completing the installation within 45 calendar days. Schnabel Engineering of Alpharetta, GA, performed the design work.

ETI’s crews employed the use of Geobrugg’s TECCO mesh, having had previous experience with the product on other projects where low headroom was an issue. The high-strength steel wire open mesh is favored by ETI as an economical and effective facing material for anchored slope stabilization system, eliminating drainage needs and facilitating greening.

“This was the only alternative that would really have worked for the issue of time,” says Greene. “Plus, our space was limited.”

TECCO mesh is a diagonal wire mesh made from high-tensile, highly corrosion-resistant wire, the strength of which is akin to wire rope nets. An anchor plate optimizes force transfer from mesh to anchors, allowing the mesh to be pre-tensioned against the slope, restricting deformations in critical surface sections and preventing movement along planes of weakness.

For the Georgia Tech job, ETI excavated 6 feet of material in front of the proposed wall, located just 4 feet from active roadway utilities. Holes were drilled for soil nails at approximately 5-foot centers in a process similar to other slope-face installations. The company used TEI rock drills and a John Deere mini-excavator for the work.

ETI crews rolled out the TECCO mesh, cutting it to the length of the finished wall. After each panel was sized, it was laid on top of a length of black geofabric that was then cut to the same size.

Each mesh/geofabric panel was transported to the top of the proposed wall and then laid side by side with the necessary overlap for stitching together.

After the first two rows of nails were installed, each panel was lowered and installed on the “short” wall section as workers took care to ensure each roll did not become unraveled while retaining the proper two-diamond overlap for correct installation.

Photo: Lock + Load
This tiered retaining wall conforms gracefully with the natural contours of the landscape.

As workers excavated more soil and the wall grew in height, more nails were put in and each mesh/geofabric panel was unrolled to cover the new wall length before the spike plates were installed.

This technique was used until the entire wall length was evacuated and secured with the TECCO system. After all of the panels were extended their entire length, compression claws were installed to stitch the mesh into one contiguous panel.

The project was completed within the 45-day deadline and within the budget.

ETI favors the use of TECCO mesh as a replacement for shotcrete because no cure time is needed and, once spike plates are installed, the area can be further excavated.

TECCO mesh has been used in Europe for several years but is just gaining acceptance in North America.

Greene says that’s because getting engineers and others involved in the construction process on board with new products and techniques “sometimes takes a while to catch on.”

But the TECCO mesh, which ETI recently used in another job at a school site, is rapidly gaining acceptance. Greene notes his company gets calls about it on an ongoing basis now.

Chuck Irby, ETI’s president, says using the TECCO mesh on the school site has again demonstrated its usefulness in saving time.

“We don’t have to wait on ready-mix trucks and we don’t have to wait on cure time,” he says. “The very minute we’re done with some nails, we’re lowering the mesh and continuing excavation.”

On a large job site such as the one at Georgia Tech, Irby’s company was able to do its job on one side while excavation was taking place on the other side, he points out.

Advertisement

“It’s constant production every hour; there was no wait time,” he says. “That’s why we use it more than anything, especially when the project’s already behind and they’re waiting on you. We like to save anybody a few days anytime we can.”

About four years ago, the Lincoln Park Zoo in Chicago invested $29 million in the Regenstein Center for African Apes. The 29,000-square-foot facility was constructed to house a number of gorillas and chimpanzees and was designed to allow for fresh air, sunshine, plants, and simulated stands and vines as an environment through which the animals could freely roam. 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 GX Contractor Email Updates!

Get weekly news and updates through our GX Contractor email newsletter!