Geographic Information Systems Technology Use in Tracking Quality Control in In Situ Barrier Wall Construction (50051f21-259c-48c8-b98a-08fa9c39001e)

Deep Foundations Institute
Robert Roff Jamey Rosen Robert Bachus Michael Arnold Michael Bracher
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
12
File Size:
1977 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"For a high hazard USACE facility, the Center Hill Dam in Tennessee, several disparate streams of data were compiled into a single geospatial and relational enterprise data management system to store, analyze, visualize and distribute the data collected during installation of a deep cutoff wall. These data streams included historical drawings and pre-construction plans and grouting records; geological data from boreholes; attributes of barrier wall elements; element verticality data analyzed from multiple measurement methods; and concrete field and laboratory analytical data. A previously developed data management system developed by the authors, WallTracker, was extensively modified to also include manually collected and real-time measurements from several types of dam monitoring instruments. The system now uses enterprise database technologies with Geographical Information Systems capabilities to manage and relate these data streams into a common platform and allows access to the raw and interpreted data via web and desktop-based interactive tools, including interactive map and cross-sectional viewers and other graphical and tabular reporting tools. One of the primary benefits of this system is the neartransparent interaction that is possible with the Nashville District of USACE on the project. These techniques can now be effectively incorporated into systems that address the unique construction and data management tracking requirements for dams, dikes, and levees.IntroductionThe Center Hill Dam rehabilitation, as with other deep foundation installations, requires the contractor to collect a substantial amount of information over the course of the project, both for internal quality control of construction progress and methods, and for demonstrating compliance with owner specifications. This paper discusses techniques used at Center Hill Dam for consolidating, visualizing and analyzing construction and instrumentation data using relational database and Geographic Information Systems (GIS) technology, collectively referred to as an Information Management System (IMS).The remainder of this paper presents the needs and objectives of the IMS, the components and data flows involved, the capabilities and user interfaces of the systems, and the benefits for the end users."
Citation

APA: Robert Roff Jamey Rosen Robert Bachus Michael Arnold Michael Bracher  (2017)  Geographic Information Systems Technology Use in Tracking Quality Control in In Situ Barrier Wall Construction (50051f21-259c-48c8-b98a-08fa9c39001e)

MLA: Robert Roff Jamey Rosen Robert Bachus Michael Arnold Michael Bracher Geographic Information Systems Technology Use in Tracking Quality Control in In Situ Barrier Wall Construction (50051f21-259c-48c8-b98a-08fa9c39001e). Deep Foundations Institute, 2017.

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