March-April 2010

Sediment Solutions

Techniques to handle fire, flood, and construction

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Photo: Gator Guard

By Steve Goldberg

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“The good thing about the Gutter Eel,” he continues, “is that it is composed of recycled tires for the base element instead of rock, which is used in rock bags. Rock bags are not durable. If several vehicles or street sweepers, over the life of the job, hit a rock bag, the aggregate inside the bag gets out onto the pavement, which then mars the pavement, and the municipalities don’t appreciate that. They come back to the developer, saying ‘You have to repair the asphalt.’ But the Gutter Eel has that recycled rubber, so in the event one does rupture or break the fabric, you’re dealing with rubber, which can be swept up and doesn’t harm the pavement surface.”

Although regular maintenance is required, Cook finds that the job can be handled easily and efficiently. “We provide turnkey maintenance programs for our clients. We install all the initial BMPs for the community, and then we do a weekly maintenance. Part of our maintenance program includes street sweeping. The great thing about this whole process is that after a rain event, the sediment collects in front of the Gutter Eel, in front of the BMP. The fine material collects in the aggregate of the Gutter Eel, but the heavy sediments actually stay at the asphalt, and in our weekly maintenance, we come by with our gutter broom and our sweeper and remove all the sediment into our hopper.

“With the Silt-Saver, the silt collects outside of the fabric, and we have our maintenance crews come by when it gets built up. It’s all very, very efficient. In today’s market, you have to be efficient. If you’re not, you can’t be competitive.”

Reacting to an Altered Drainage Pattern
Construction on new housing development began in the St. Louis suburb of O’Fallon, MO, in 2005. The primary developer, however, ran out of funding, and his portion of the project came to a standstill.

Photo: Mike Harding
K-rails provide sediment protection at the toe of a slope.
Photo: Gator Guard
Gator Guard was chosen on this Oklahoma site for its durability and ease of repair.

The master plan, though, called for a new road to be built, and the city of O’Fallon built the road, with part of it traversing a corner of this developer’s now-defunct project. Rob Carrothers, president of Soil-Tek of Mid-America, explains what then happened. “It had always been in the development’s plans for this road to go through there, only when the city had forecast that it would be doing this, the infrastructure for the development should have already been in—but it wasn’t, because of the slowdown in the economy.”

When the road was built, Carrothers says, “It caused a change in the drainage pattern. What it did was concentrate a great deal of runoff in a 24-inch outflow that redirected the drainage on our property from a wide, sweeping sheet flow into a pretty concentrated area.” He notes that during large storms, part of this property was cascading silt and water onto the street, as well as into the area where another developer was building new homes. Carrothers’s solution? “It took extensive grading, along with some temporary sediment devices called Filtersoxx, made by Filtrexx.

“We put in some temporary sediment basins, but those couldn’t hold [the runoff from] what the city finally ended up doing with the road project. So now what we’ve done is to enlarge those further, and put in more Filtersoxx. We’re actually going to collect that water and pipe it to our detention area 300 feet away, so that we can in fact control the runoff better. We also ended up reseeding about 80 acres that needed to have good vegetative cover to get the land stable.”

Another problem Carrothers faced is that the site contains a large wetland, about 10 acres in size. “What we were most interested in doing,” he says, “was protecting that wetland so it didn’t become fouled with sediment. That was the primary reason we wanted to make sure the detention area didn’t get overwhelmed with the new drainage pattern. They were afraid that if it got overwhelmed, runoff would just cascade down this property and into that wetland.”

Maintaining Efficiency in the Midwest
Silt fence has its place in the toolbox of erosion control experts, but Jeff Patten is not a big fan of it. His company, Rocbox Construction Services in Tulsa, OK, works with local homebuilders to control sediment runoff from construction sites. He found a workable solution as a result of a problem at his own house.

“I built a house about a year and a half ago,” Patten explains, “and the municipality where I live was starting to use new national guidelines on erosion control. The builder I was using was red-tagged, not for anything that he was doing wrong, but because he wasn’t keeping the silt fence up. Here in the middle part of the country, we get thunderstorms, sometimes 1 to 3 inches of rain overnight, and it would knock a regular silt fence down. We needed something new that was subcontractor-friendly, so I went out looking and found the Gator Guard and ordered a small amount of it. It just took off from there. One builder told another builder, who told another builder, and now I’ve got about 15 builders that buy from me.”

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Patten has taken the time to learn his customers’ needs. “These are not guys who have huge construction projects. They treat every construction project as its own entity, and it almost has its own set of books. Every house has to make money, has to have a profit margin. And you’re talking about a profit margin of 8% to 10% sometimes on these smaller houses. In this part of the country you’re talking about a $125,000 house, so you’re looking at a $10,000 profit margin, and you can’t spend $5,000 on erosion control. You need something that’s fast, something that works.

“The black silt fence would blow down, so three or four times during a six-month build they would have to go out and redo their erosion control. This particular product, Gator Guard—they put it down, and as long as it’s installed correctly, it works out. Another reason builders are using it is that, if you’re building a house next to someone who’s living there, and if you get dirt in somebody else’s yard, they tend to get upset. When you put this stuff down, it keeps the neighbors a little happier.” Next Page >

What Do You Think?

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soilrxs

March 10th, 2010 3:53 PM PT

Great article, and great approach. The only thing I would change is to avoid building catch basins (that are doomed to fill and then spill) but instead build channels to the ocean so the mud (that once was topsoil) will be able to reach the beaches where it is needed. Ben

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