ArkiePE
Civil/Environmental
- May 27, 2010
- 2
My firm has landed some work with a municipality to design some pedestrian trails throughout the city. In many areas, the trail follows natural streams and there are several stream crossings. For each stream crossing, we are required to produce a "no rise" study showing a 100-yr water surface elevation increase of no more than 0.1'. This has proved to be problematic. Due to the topography, spanning the floodway for a 10' wide pedestrian trail is not feasable. This leaves 2 options: build a steel truss bridge subject to flooding, or build a shallow bridge with no handrails. Any pedestrian bridge located in the floodway must not be more than 2.5' in elevation (from the flowline of the stream to the walking surface) without handrails for safety reasons. I can't meet the "no rise" requirements on any bridge with handrails or trusses because these would block the flow. The low-water bridges (2.5' from flowline) are so shallow that base flow, blockage, and frequent flooding become an issue. Also, we are trying to span the full length of most of the streams to avoid permitting difficulties with the corps of engineers, DEQ, and US Fish & Wildlife. Has anyone else run into this problem?