Don't pour a wall, spray it
New method more cost efficient than traditional construction, contractors say
By Bo Petersen
Wonder what that hose is spraying on the new Remount Road off-ramp on Interstate 26?
Video
Interstate 26 construction
A construction crew working on the Interstate 26 widening project in North Charleston sprays concrete to build a "soil nail" retaining wall.
It's a wall. A 100-ton concrete wall.
The retaining wall for the eastbound off-ramp by the Bank of America building is being built with Shock-crete, a new generation concrete application that uses air pressure and a pump to spread a congealing mass of the liquid stone.
It's a quicker way to set a wall than erecting forms and backing up the cement truck.
"You pump it and then blow it on," said Shane Garrett, supervisor for Wurster Engineering and Construction, the subcontractor building the wall. The process is a little messy, he concedes, but it gets the job done.
The wall is one of six types that will be built along the project's three-mile length, per S.C. Department of Transportation specifications.
The Post and Courier
Workers on Tuesday apply concrete to a retaining wall by spraying it during construction around the Remount Road exit ramp on Interstate 26 in North Charleston.
That's an unusual variety for this size project and maybe a harbinger of the engineering to come as the busy metro stretch of I-26 becomes what observers say could well be the first real densely urban highway in the state.
The built-by-spraying structure is actually called a "soil nail" wall.
A series of 12-feet long rods, or nails, are driven into the dirt bank behind it, then the Shock-crete secures them.
The resistance between the two holds back the earthen bank. A brick face will be built over the wall.
"It's more efficient, more cost-effective and more cost-effective in long-term maintenance," said Greg Cook, vice president of U.S. Group, the construction company running the project.
"If you had a rigid concrete wall, it would crack and have to be repaired."
Other walls called for in the project include sheet pile walls that are driven section by section into the ground and a mechanically stabilized wall built to hold fill dirt using reinforcements in the dirt.
The work is part of a three-year, $66 million project to widen the interstate to eight lanes in a stretch from Interstate 526 to Ashley Phosphate Road, where rush-hour traffic routinely jams.
Reach Bo Petersen at 745-5852 or bpetersen@postandcourier.com.
Comments
letstakeawalk (anonymous) says...
"...is being built with Shock-crete, a new generation concrete application that uses air pressure and a pump to spread a congealing mass of the liquid stone."
What's new about it? Dry-process shotcrete, or Gunite, has been around since at least 1911 (when it was patented). The wet-process has been around since the 1950's.
December 26, 2008 at 12:54 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
eyecantspel (anonymous) says...
The only thing more boring than this story is the first comment. Snooze.....
December 26, 2008 at 1:21 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
tigerrecord (anonymous) says...
it's obviously revolutionary. they've been using SHOT crete in pools for the last 30 years.
December 26, 2008 at 9:19 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
Hwebster (anonymous) says...
I suspect , when the writer finds out about ferro cement, we'll have a news item of making boats out of cement or concrete.
Pictures of the SS Major Butts at low tide in the harbor will be available.
December 26, 2008 at 10:29 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
MMitchum (anonymous) says...
Yep...comments above...lmao...this is for people who don't know. Not the ones who think they know everything.
December 26, 2008 at 11:34 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
letstakeawalk (anonymous) says...
@ MMitchum
I'm sorry if my comment bored anyone. Apparently my late great-great-grandfather is more up to date (rest his soul) on the latest concrete applications than Bo Peterson.
In the meantime, I've developed this new concept, whereby I propose to transmit my voice from a studio to another place far distant inside a little box, which will allow potentially dozens of people to hear it. I call it "radeo"... The P&C should do a story on the possible uses!
December 27, 2008 at 12:22 a.m. ( permalink | suggest removal )
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