Retaining Wall Design

New Oregon Road – Road Failure

The site parallels the South Branch of Eighteen Mile Creek, and at this location, a steep slope approximately 30 feet high existed between the creek bed and road surface. Over time this slope had experienced erosion, scour, and surficial failures, which resulted in pavement failures along the adjacent road.

Location

North Collins, New York

Client

Greenman-Pedersen, Inc. for Erie County Department of Public Works

Date

2011

The site parallels the South Branch of Eighteen Mile Creek, and at this location, a steep slope approximately 30 feet high existed between the creek bed and road surface. Over time this slope had experienced erosion, scour, and surficial failures, which resulted in pavement failures along the adjacent road.

The geotechnical issue at this site was the topography of competent rock beneath the highway and around the sloughing area. Test borings and test pits were used to measure the edge of shale beneath the road and the inclination of the shale from beneath the highway to the creek bed below. The test pits also allowed for observation of the rock structure. The planned design focused on removing the overburden soils along the highway alignment down to the competent rock surface. A mechanically stabilized earth (MSE) wall was constructed on top of the rock surface to reestablish the road.

The MSE wall allowed for a near-vertical 12-foot-high slope, which allowed the remainder of the lower slope down to creek to be flattened and covered with rip-rap. During construction, the shale bedrock was observed to establish the bedding and joint patterns. From these observations, bedrock at the site was found to have nearly horizontal bedding planes and a favorable vertical joint structure for supporting the MSE wall.

Shape

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