minnjoe
Civil/Environmental
- Feb 20, 2013
- 11
Hi,
I'm designing a sanitary sewer that will include a 1,200' section extending through a slough. The slough is subjected to annual ice flows (shallow shields, typically 4" to 6" thick) from an adjacent river and I noticed many of the area trees are severely scarred due to abrasive action of the ice. Two manholes/juntion chambers have to be constructed in the slough; both less than 8' deep (invert to ground surface).
Questions:
Can anyone offer any advice or recommend any precautionary measures that should be taken to avoid potential ice shear on the proposed manholes? The manholes could be constructed with the top castings below grade...but this isn't highly desirable for maintenance reasons. Or, maybe a ring of riprap could be placed around the structures as a sacrificial interface to break up ice before it reaches the manholes? Maybe this is a non-issue?
Thanks!
I'm designing a sanitary sewer that will include a 1,200' section extending through a slough. The slough is subjected to annual ice flows (shallow shields, typically 4" to 6" thick) from an adjacent river and I noticed many of the area trees are severely scarred due to abrasive action of the ice. Two manholes/juntion chambers have to be constructed in the slough; both less than 8' deep (invert to ground surface).
Questions:
Can anyone offer any advice or recommend any precautionary measures that should be taken to avoid potential ice shear on the proposed manholes? The manholes could be constructed with the top castings below grade...but this isn't highly desirable for maintenance reasons. Or, maybe a ring of riprap could be placed around the structures as a sacrificial interface to break up ice before it reaches the manholes? Maybe this is a non-issue?
Thanks!