lindbls
Civil/Environmental
- Apr 14, 2003
- 31
I will have a stormwater pond constructed on gently sloping ground, bounded in part by a soil embankment, the other sides will be cut into existing ground. The interior and exterior slopes need to be between 3:1 and 4:1 to obtain the storage volume I need and the max slope for safety reasons (per our local drainage manual). The top of the berm is expected to be 6 feet wide at minimum. The max water depth will be about 4 feet, with one foot of freeboard.
How extensive of a design is typical for such a soil embankment? Or, following "standard guidelines" (of which there may be some??), is a detailed design not typically performed (e.g., flat slopes, wide crest, low berm). If a detailed design is standard practice,(which I'm suspecting it is) what are some of the more common standard design approaches?
(I work in a goverment office that is short on experienced engineers and long on managers...it provides nobody to bounce things off of.)
How extensive of a design is typical for such a soil embankment? Or, following "standard guidelines" (of which there may be some??), is a detailed design not typically performed (e.g., flat slopes, wide crest, low berm). If a detailed design is standard practice,(which I'm suspecting it is) what are some of the more common standard design approaches?
(I work in a goverment office that is short on experienced engineers and long on managers...it provides nobody to bounce things off of.)