Overcoming the Challenges Endured by the Quality Assurance and Quality Control Teams during the Construction of a Deep Cutoff Wall in East Alton, Illinois

Deep Foundations Institute
Matteo Bertoni Raffaella Granata Wesley Schmutzler
Organization:
Deep Foundations Institute
Pages:
9
File Size:
502 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2017

Abstract

"The Lower Wood River Levee system, at the confluence of the Wood River Creek and the Mississippi River, in East Alton, Illinois, has been plagued with underground seepage and, in 2010, remediation was deemed necessary by the Southwestern Illinois Flood Prevention District Council and the United States Army Corp of Engineers (USACE). The experts enlisted by the council produced a design that provided for constructing a cutoff wall approximately 2,000 feet long and up to 140 feet deep, through alluvial and outwash soils, and embedded in bedrock. This paper will describe the challenges faced by the Quality Control (QC) and Quality Assurance (QA) teams due to the complex nature of the project in conjunction with an extremely thorough QC/QA program.INTRODUCTIONThe “American Bottom” is an area of 453 km2 (175 square miles) in Southwestern Illinois, extending from Alton south to the Kaskaskia River, which is home to 156,000 people. In the 1940s and 1950s the U.S. Army Corp of Engineers (USACE) designed and built a 120 kilometer (74 mile) long levee system to protect the area from a 500-year flood event on the Mississippi River, which flows through it. The levee system has been plagued by under-seepage for several years. The phenomenon has worsened to varying degrees, depending on location, to the point that remediation was needed.The Southwestern Illinois Flood Prevention District Council (SIFPDC), to obtain Federal Emergency Management accreditation, in June 2010 commissioned a team lead by Amec Foster Wheeler for the design and management of the required levee improvements. The team presented in 2011 the project’s first set of drawings showing proposed design features throughout the levee system. The project was subdivided in four areas, based on the controlling levee districts, one of which, the Wood River Drainage and Levee District, was split into three subdivisions: Upper Wood River, East-West Forks of Wood River, and Lower Wood River.The project included the installation of a cutoff wall at the confluence of the Wood River and the Mississippi River in East Alton, IL (Fig. 1). The Engineer of Record (Amec Foster Wheeler) considered the cutoff wall as the only viable solution to stop the severe under-seepage that was undermining the integrity of the Lower Wood River Levee. The Lower Cutoff Wall (LCW) project is the subject of this paper."
Citation

APA: Matteo Bertoni Raffaella Granata Wesley Schmutzler  (2017)  Overcoming the Challenges Endured by the Quality Assurance and Quality Control Teams during the Construction of a Deep Cutoff Wall in East Alton, Illinois

MLA: Matteo Bertoni Raffaella Granata Wesley Schmutzler Overcoming the Challenges Endured by the Quality Assurance and Quality Control Teams during the Construction of a Deep Cutoff Wall in East Alton, Illinois. Deep Foundations Institute, 2017.

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