24″ Water Main Abandonment
The Job
This 24″ water main abandonment project is located in Fairfax, Virginia. Fairfax County is part of the rapidly expanding Northern Virginia region. As part of a large transportation project, 2000 linear feet of 24″ water main were being relocated out of a highway right-of-way.
The Challenge
Due to phasing, the old water main was located under the existing roadway and could not be accessed, except for at one point near the center of the run. So, the abandonment grout had to meet VDOT’s minimum strength requirements for flowable fill, and be pumpable up to 1100LF at low pressure. VDOT’s minimum 28 day unconfined compressive strength requirement is 30psi.
The Solution
CJGeo grouted each run of pipe using 30lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight low density controlled low strength material. Each CJFill-UL placement took fewer than two hours, and required no additional traffic control, disruptions to other construction activities, or help from the utility contractor after they installed the bulkheads.
The 28 day compressive strength of 30lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular grout is 150psi. This significantly exceeds VDOT’s minimum compressive strength for controlled low strength material (flowable fill).
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Facing a similar challenge to this 24″ water main abandonment project that CJGeo completed using CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular concrete? Give us a shout or shoot us a text. Click the state marker for the location of your project for contact info for the appropriate rep.
Rising Mains 48″ Abandonments
The Job
This Pittsburgh pipe abandonment project is located within the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. It is part of the Rising Mains No 3 & 4 replacement project. Plans call for filling with grout roughly 1575LF of 48″ water main.
The Challenge
The abandonment was specified for traditional controlled low strength material (flowable fill). However the contractor had doubts about being able to successfully perform the pipe abandonments with flowable fill. These concerns were based on access limitations, ready mix delivery limitations and the roughly 20′ of elevation change over the length of the pipe.
The Solution
The contractor reached out to CJGeo about using low density controlled low strength material (LD-CLSM). CJGeo evaluated the pipeline as-builts and recommended a CJGeo 25lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular concrete mix design. 25lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight’s average 80psi compressive strength at 28 days (ASTM C495) is ideal for abandoning the pipes. The low density maximizes yield (finished volume per ton of cement), and provides adequate bearing capacity in most situations.
Using onsite dry batching, CJGeo generated and placed 730CY of grout to successfully fill the pipe, which was access near the middle to create two segments. The work took two days onsite to complete. Onsite batching directly from bulk cement was advantageous on this project for the following reasons:
- economical – it costs significantly less than ready mix flowable fill
- speed – CJGeo made more than 100CY of CJFill-UL per hour
- safety – peak placement pressures were less than ten psi
- logistics – it only took five loads of cement, whereas flowable fill would have taken 92 loads
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Facing a similar challenge to this Pittsburgh pipe abandonment project that CJGeo completed with CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular grout? Give us a shout or shoot us a text. Click the state marker for the location of your project for contact info for the appropriate rep.
Power Station Pipe Abandonment
The Job
This power station pipe abandonment project is between Richmond & Lynchburg, Virginia, along the James River. Dominion’s Bremo Bluff Power Station was taken off line in 2019. As part of complete decommissioning, demolition and site restoration took place in 2022.
The Challenge
Power stations typically have extensive pipes for cooling water circulation. At Bremo Bluff, the buried cooling pipe network consists for four, four foot diameter pipes, connecting to a junction box. Total linear footage of the forty-eight inch pipes is about six hundred linear feet.
Due to the remote location, the demolition contractor knew that it would be difficult to get timely deliveries of the nearly 40 loads of flowable fill needed to fill the pipes.
The Solution
The demolition contractor reached out to CJGeo for consultation on the best type of flowable fill for the pipe abandonment work. CJGeo recommended 25lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight. 25lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight has a 28 day compressive strength (ASTM C495) greater than 50 psi. This met the owner’s requirements.
25lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight is nearly 80% air content. Therefore, each twenty-five ton load of cement delivered to the site turns into nearly 150 cubic yards of finished product. Due to this on-site expansion, instead of needing nearly 40 loads of ready mix flowable fill, the work only needed two loads of cement.
CJGeo generated and placed approximately 300CY of CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular concrete to fill the junction box and pipes. CJGeo made all of the material over a few hours onsite, using dry batch generation.
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Facing a similar challenge to this power station pipe abandonment project? Give us a shout or shoot us a text. Click the state marker for the location of your project for contact info for the appropriate rep.
Low Level Outfall Abandonment
The Job
This low level outfall abandonment grouting project is located in New Jersey. The Round Valley Reservoir, in Clinton Township, New Jersey is a 2300 acre man-made drinking water reservoir. It serves extensive portions of New Jersey. It was constructed by damming up two openings in a naturally-curved mountain.
As part of a dam upgrade project, a 1400LF, 36″ inner diameter LLO pipe needed to be grouted to place it out of service.
The Challenge
The pipe had been previously blind flanged, 180′ below the lake surface. There was a single, 12″ riser pedestal. There were numerous significant challenges to face, including:
- 2GPM residual leak from the blind flange buried in 15′ of lake floor debris
- inability to push sacrificial pipes more than 500′ up the pipe
- remote site with limited ready mix service
The Solution
CJGeo worked with the general contractor, diving subcontractor, sacrificial grout pipe installation subcontractor, geotechnical and civil EORs, and the owner, to develop a single stage grouting plan to place approximately 350CY of 68lb/cuft CJFill-Under Water cellular grout from the downstream end.
Venting was achieved by installing a 4″ removable vent pipe from the pedestal riser. The vent pipe ran 180VF to the lake surface, terminating on a barge. There was only one opportunity to do the job correctly. Therefore, CJGeo had two fully staffed grout plants onsite, and had all cement and mix water staged in onsite storage. This was all prior to the start of grouting to avoid any material logistics disruptions affecting the work.
CJGeo placed the 68lb/cuft grout over a period of a few hours, leaving an intentional air pocket at the high end to capture infiltrating lake water long enough for the grout to set prior to seeing lake head.
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HRSD 24″ Forcemain Abandonment
The Job
HRSD‘s Virginia Beach Boulevard Forcemain Replacement project installed more than a mile of new pipe to replace an aging 24″ force main. The owner specified forcemain abandonment using grout.
The Challenge
The original alignment was outside the pavement limits. Over time due to extensive widening, most of the pipe was now under the roadway. The areas not under the roadway crossed under significant commercial & residential development.
To avoid the risk of utility strikes digging access pits, and disruption to traffic and citizens, the number of access points needed to be limited.
The Forcemain Abandonment Solution
CJGeo grouted more than 7,000LF of the 24″ pipe over a period of four working days onsite, using CJFill-Ultra Lightweight. The CJFill-UL completely filled each run of pipe. This was verified by uniform material venting from the far end of each run. Run lengths for the forcemain abandonment ranged from 450LF to more than 2000LF.
The CJFill-UL for this project was generated onsite using the wet batch process. Wet batching uses slurry delivered to the site by ready mix trucks. This method was best here because of very limited access at each of the placement points. The relatively short runs also lean towards wet batching.
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DeRuyter Reservoir Outfall Abandonment
The Job
This outfall abandonment project is located in Upstate New York. The DeRuyter Reservoir, in DeRuyter, New York, is a 557 reservoir that’s originally part of the Erie Canal system.
As part of a dam upgrade project, the three parallel 22″ diameter, 300LF outfall pipes were to be abandoned. Along with a stone box culvert downstream of the valve chamber the pipes terminated into.
The Challenge
Each of the three pipes had been previously blindly flanged by divers. Therefore, the only access was from the downstream end within the valve chamber. In order to vent the air displaced by the abandonment grout, vent or placement points needed to be installed just behind the upstream blind flanges. The blind flanges are approximately 40′ below the water surface.
The Solution
CJGeo worked with the general contractor to design an internal venting system utilizing sacrificial placement pipes installed from the valve chamber. After each of the sacrificial grout pipes was installed, the downstream terminations were bulkheaded, with vent stubs.
CJGeo mobilized a cellular grouting crew, who placed 30lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular concrete through each of the sacrificial grout pipes, until grout returned to the bulkhead vents, confirming fill. The work took two days. The first day for the abandonment pipes and first lift in the box culvert, and the second day for a top-off pour on the box culvert.
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Toe Drain Abandonment
The Job
This toe drain abandonment project is located outside of Washington, DC. Lake Whetstone is an approximately 30-acre manmade impoundment located in Montgomery County, Maryland. The approximately 1000LF earthen dam provides stormwater runoff control and recreation.
As part of a retrofit program of the embankment, two 8″, perforated CMP toe drain pipes need to be grouted for a minimum of 100LF, under active flow.
The Challenge
Each of the two, 100′ long pipes needed to be grout filled. The pipes are only could only be accessable from the downstream end of the pipes. One pipe had nominal flow, and the second pipe had approximately 10GPM of flow. Each discharges through an end wall structure at the stilling basin.
The Solution
The project designer, Gannett Fleming, specified NSF Section 61 certified grout (potable water contact) for the abandonment grout. Due to the “one-shot” nature of the project, above-ground mockups, including sacrificial pipe installation, chemical grout cup testing, yield analysis, and visual inspection, were all required prior to the start of grouting.
While most abandonment grouting uses high mobility cement grout, like CJFill-Ultra Lightweight, chemical grout was the best option for this abandonment. Chemical grout’s reaction speed (and therefore mobility) is controllable onsite by variable catalyst dosing. This helps ensure minimizing any migration of grout into adjacent structures or waterways.
CJGeo performed the onsite mockup testing and analysis, and then grouted the two pipes in place successfully over a period of two days onsite.
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1 Mile 36″ Waterline Abandonment
THE JOB
CSX crews were surfacing the mainline track in Baltimore when the tamping equipment struck an object immediately below the ties. Investigation revealed that it was a manhole associated with nearly 6000LF of 36″ water main primarily running immediately below the tracks. The municipality relocated the waterline. Next, they had to fill the pipe from just two intermediate points. There were three sections of pipe; 1200LF, 1600LF & 2900LF. Various potential solutions for the watermain abandonment included:
- threading sacrificial tubing and grouting on the way out, and
- pumping flowable fill from the manholes,
However, none were economical or could guarantee a pipe abandonment below the railroad.
THE CHALLENGE
The project designer, OBG, identified cellular concrete as a potential solution to the problem and reached out to CJGeo to determine its feasibility. CJGeo confirmed the appropriateness of cellular concrete and set out to create a grouting plan. Coordination between the utility contractor and slurry provider (the site was too small to set up a batch plant) was crucial to ensure that the runs of pipe were all successfully filled in a single shot each. With train frequencies of 3-4 per hour, if the operation didn’t work and the pipes were only partially filled, there was no opportunity to create intermediate access points to finish grouting a section of pipe.
Based on the required bearing capacity and production requirements, CJGeo proposed 22lb/cuft CJFill-Ultra Lightweight cellular concrete for abandonment. With a 25psi break strength at 28 days, the mix provided the required strength, met the CSX utility occupancy standard for abandonment, and maximized expansion in order to ensure the longest run, which required nearly 1000CY of the finished product, could be grouting in a single shot.
THE SOLUTION
CJGeo mobilized a 150CY/hour cellular concrete crew to the site and performed the two shorter runs the first week. The project was broken into two different weeks due to the criticality of ensuring the longest run was filled completely without issue. The first two runs allowed CJGeo, the GC, railway flaggers, railway operations, and the slurry provider the opportunity to work out any kinks in operations during the lower risk placements.
The following Tuesday, starting at 0600, Chaney Enterprises delivered the first of 24 loads of slurry. Overall, the work took three days. CJGeo generated & pumped a total of 1710 cubic yards of cellular concrete to successfully complete the waterline abandonment.
This project would have been much easier using a mobile batch plant, which we now have three of.
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Facing a similar challenge to this waterline abandonment project? Give us a shout or shoot us a text. Click the state marker for the location of the project for contact info for the appropriate rep.