CONSTRUCTION SITE DRAINAGE TIPS AND TECHNIQUES TUTORIALS

CONSTRUCTION SITE DRAINAGE BASIC INFORMATION
What Are Construction Site Drainage? How To Create Site Drainage For Construction?


Difficulty often occurs in draining a site where large scale earthmoving is taking place. The excavations disturb the natural drainage of the land and large quantities of mud may be discharged to local watercourses during wet weather.

Complaints then arise from riparian owners and water abstractors downstream. If this possibility should occur the resident engineer should advise the contractor to approach the appropriate drainage authority (the Environment Agency in England and Wales) to seek advice on the best course of action to alleviate the problem, such as arranging some form of stank to pond the runoff and allow the heaviest suspended solids to settle out.

It is the contractor’s responsibility to dewater the site, and this includes the obligation to do so without
causing harm or damage to others. Dewatering can range from simple diversion or piping to ditches, to fullscale 24 h pumping and groundwater table lowering. It is usual to cut perimeter drains on high ground around all extensive excavations.

In dry weather this may seem a waste of time, but once wet weather ensues and the ground becomes saturated, further rain may bring a storm runoff of surprising magnitude. If no protection exists for these occasions extensive damage can be caused to both temporary and permanent works.

The resident engineer should assist the contractor to appreciate the danger of flood damage by providing him with data showing possible flood magnitudes. A frequently used precaution is to assume that a flood of magnitude 1 year in 10 (i.e. 10 per cent probability) will occur during the course of construction.

The need to dewater an excavation in the British Isles is the rule rather than the exception. Once dewatered an excavation should be kept dewatered. To repeatedly dewater an excavation during the day and let it fill up overnight can cause ground instability, and timbering to excavations may be rendered unsafe.

The need for 24 h pumping should be insisted upon by the resident engineer if he thinks damage or danger could occur from intermittent dewatering. The electric self-priming centrifugal pump is the most reliable for continuous dewatering, having the advantage that it is relatively silent for night operation as compared with petrol or diesel engine driven pumps.

For groundwater lowering, pointed and screened suction pipes are jetted into the ground at intervals around a proposed excavation and are connected to a common header suction pipe leading to a vacuum pump. It may take a week or more before the groundwater is lowered sufficiently, but when the process works well (as in silt or running sand) the effect is quite remarkable.

It permits excavation to proceed with ease in ground that, prior to dewatering, may be semi-liquid. However, it can be difficult to get the well points jetted down into ground containing cobbles and boulders; and in clays the well points need to be protected by carefully graded filters, or the withdrawal of water may eventually diminish because the well point screens become sealed by clay.

Special precautions must be taken to avoid damage to any adjacent structures when dewatering any excavation or groundwater lowering. In some soils groundwater lowering may cause building foundations to settle, causing considerable damage.

The contractor may have to provide an impermeable barrier between the pumped area and nearby structures, monitor water levels and perhaps provide for re-charge of groundwater under structures. Avital precaution is for the resident engineer to record in detail all signs of distress (cracks, tilts, etc.) in adjacent structures and take photographs of them, dated and sized, before work starts, in order to provide evidence of the extent of any damage which may occur.

The drainage of clay or clay and silt can present difficulty. The problem is not so much that it cannot be done, but that it can take a long time, perhaps many weeks. Sand drains (i.e. bored holes filled with fine sand), can be satisfactory as part of the permanent design of the works, but they usually operate too slowly to be of use during construction. If ground is too soft, any attempt to start excavating it by machine may make matters considerably worse, and end with the machine having to be hauled out.

The act of removing overburden may make a soft area even softer as springs and streams, otherwise restrained by the overburden material, break out and change the area to a semi-liquid state. If the resident engineer sees the contractor moving towards these difficulties he should advise him of the possible consequences, and endeavour to give assistance in devising a better approach.

A paramount need may be to call in an experienced geotechnical engineer to investigate the problem and give advice as to the best policy to handle the situation.

SETTING OUT VERTICALITY, TUNNELS AND PIPELINES DURING CONSTRUCTION

VERTICALITY, TUNNELS AND PIPELINES SETTING DURING CONSTRUCTION 
How To Set Verticality, Tunnels, and Pipelines For Construction?


As a building rises the vertical alignment must also be controlled. This can be done by extending building centre lines at right angles to each other out to fixed points clear of the structure.

These lines can then be projected up the building and marked, allowing accurate measurements from these marks at each floor. Alternatively an optical plumb can be used to project a fixed point up through openings in the floors of the building so as to provide a set of reference points at each level.


The standard of setting out for tunnels must be high using carefully calibrated equipment, precise application and double checking everything. An accurate tunnel baseline is first set out on the surface using the methods described above.

Transference of this below ground can be done by direct sighting down a shaft if the shaft is sufficiently large to allow this without distortion of sight-lines on the theodolite. With smaller shafts, plumbing down may be used.

A frame is needed either side of the shaft to hold the top ends of the plumb-lines and to allow adjustment to bring them exactly on the baseline. The plumb-line used should be of stainless steel wire, straight and unkinked, and the bob of a special type is held in a bath of oil to damp out any motion.

By this means the tunnel line is reproduced at the bottom of the shaft and can be rechecked as the tunnel proceeds.

Many tunnels are nowadays controlled by lasers, the laser gun being set up on a known line parallel to the centre line for the tunnel and aimed at a target. Where a tunnelling machine is used, the operator can adjust the direction of movement of the machine to keep it on target so that the tunnel is driven in the right direction.

For other methods of tunnelling, target marks can be set on the soffit of rings, the tunnel direction being kept on line by adjusting the excavation and packing out any tunnel rings to keep on the proper line.

Lasers are also used in many other situations, usually for controlling construction rather than for original setting out since their accuracy for this may not be good enough. The laser beam gives a straight line at whatever slope or level is required, and so can be used for aligning forms for road pavements or even laying large pipes to a given gradient.

For the latter, the laser is positioned at the start of a line of pipes and focused on the required base line. As each new pipe is fitted into the pipeline a target is placed in the invert of the open end of the pipe, using a spirit level to find the bottom point, and the pipe is adjusted in line and level until the target falls on the laser beam. Bedding and surround to the pipe are then placed to fix the pipe in position.

Rotating lasers are also widely used and once set up give a constant reference plane at a known level. Use of a staff fitted with a reflector allows spot levels to be obtained anywhere in the area covered by the laser. Earthmoving equipment fitted with appropriate sensors can also be operated to control the level of excavation or filling with minimum input other than by the machine operator.

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