Gulf Intracoastal Waterway West Closure Complex

Gulf Intracoastal Waterway West Closure Complex

Installation of a 653 ton Sector Gate Leaf at GIWW West Closure
Coordinates 29°48′56″N 90°04′06″W / 29.81556°N 90.06833°W / 29.81556; -90.06833Coordinates: 29°48′56″N 90°04′06″W / 29.81556°N 90.06833°W / 29.81556; -90.06833
Crosses Gulf Intracoastal Waterway
Locale New Orleans, Louisiana
Owner US Army Corps of Engineers
Characteristics
Material Concrete, steel
History
Constructed by Gulf IntraCoastal Constructors, a Joint Venture of Kiewit and Traylor Bros
Construction begin August 2009
Construction end April 2014
Construction cost ~$1 Billion

The Gulf Intracoastal Waterway West Closure Complex is a part of the New Orleans Drainage System; it consists of a navigable floodgate, a pumping station, flood walls, sluice gates, foreshore protection, and an earthen levee. The complex was designed to reduce risk for residences and businesses in the project area from a storm surge associated with a tropical event, with an intensity that has a one percent chance of occurring in any given year. This project was operated for the first time on August 29, 2012, in response to Hurricane Isaac.[1]

Location

The project is located approximately one half mile south of the confluence of the Harvey and Algiers canals on the Gulf Intracoastal Waterway. The location is next to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Bayou aux Carpes Clean Water Act (CWA) 404(c) area, a wetland area of national significance.

Features

The GIWW West Closure Complex consists of a navigable floodgate, a pumping station, floodwalls, sluice gates, foreshore protection, and an earthen levee. The project also required the dredging of Algiers Canal, as well as the realignment of Bayou Road. Project challenges consist of maintaining navigation traffic on the GIWW (a Federal navigation channel with heavy commercial barge traffic) and the location of the complex in relationship to the Environmental Protection Agency’s Bayou aux Carpes Clean Water Act (CWA) 404(c) area, a wetland area of national significance.

The GIWW West Closure Complex will reduce the risk to a large area of the west bank by removing over 25 miles (40 km) of levees, floodwalls, a floodgate, and pumping stations along the Harvey and Algiers canals from the direct impacts of storm surge. The risk reduction surge barrier will be completed by the 2011 Atlantic hurricane season with reduced pumping capacity. All project construction is scheduled for completion in late 2012.

Status

Final approval of the Individual Environmental Report #12 for the GIWW West Closure Complex was completed 18 February 2009. On 28 May 09, the Environmental Protection Agency granted the US Army Corps of Engineers permission to modify the Bayou aux Carpes 1985 determination to allow for construction on the western-most boundary of the wetland area. The Corps held a joint public hearing with the EPA to address all questions and concerns regarding the request for modification of the Bayou Aux Carpes 404(c) area.

On 17 April 2009, the Corps awarded the base portion of the Early Contractor Involvement (ECI) contract to Gulf Intracoastal Constructors for pile load testing and pre-construction services. The ECI contracting method (also known as Construction Management at Risk in private industry) allows the construction contractor to work hand-in-hand with the Corps and the design team on plan revisions and construction sequencing that will improve the constructability and cost-savings of the project. Several more construction options have been awarded since April. Construction of risk reduction features began on 6 August 2009.

On 6 & 10 March 2011, installation of the 653 ton ea. sector gates was completed.

The Notice of Construction Complete was issued on April 8th, 2014. [2]

Sources

  1. NOLA.com, Retrieved 2010-07-26
  2. Engineering News Record Web Site, Retrieved 2010-07-26
  3. US Army Corps of Engineers Web Site, Retrieved 2010-07-26
  4. Pop Sci Web Site, Retrieved 2010-07-26
  5. Southeast Louisiana Flood Protection Authority West Web Site, Retrieved 2010-07-26
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