oldestguy
Geotechnical
- Jun 6, 2006
- 5,183
A 10" plastic gravity sewer was installed about 40 years ago and it then was 4 feet below stream bed at the crossing. Recent flooding conditions have exposed it so there is perhaps 3 feet of water depth beneath it and it is barely under the water surface now. One fix planned is construct a rip-rap weir downstream with the intent to cause sediment to deposit behind the weir and eventually cover the sewer. I am not too sure about this as working as intended. Currently the regulating agency seems to go with this idea, but no placement of riprap at the pipe itself allowed. This "fix" would supposedly restore the stream bed up to its earlier position. That probably would extend back upstream a few hundred yards. However, this location may be a gouged out hole. I have yet to see it. Sizing the weir and its materials is not the question, but will sediment gradually stay and keep cover at the pipe? Stream is about 20 to 30 feet wide and in a flood plain that enters still water a mile downstream, that is a lake. Grades are very flat and stream in slack times is barely moving. In flood times a guess of one to two ft./sec. velocity since this is at just upstream from a highway bridge. Experiences with this or similar please. Soil is silt and fine sand, occasional gravel.