Skip to main content

Quick to install embankment support

Technology from Tensar played a vital role along the Dishforth-Leeming section of the North Yorkshire A1 improvement work in northern England where new carriageways are being built adjacent to the existing in-use highway.
February 17, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
Technology from 340 Tensar played a vital role along the Dishforth-Leeming section of the North Yorkshire A1 improvement work in northern England where new carriageways are being built adjacent to the existing in-use highway.

By using a Tensartech TR2 Wall solution to create a temporary structure while raising a below grade section, the 2435 Carillion/2567 Morgan Sindall joint venture contractors are saving time and helping to minimise traffic disruption.

The existing 150m section of the A1 road either side of the Butcher House Bridge is up to 10m below the final required grade of the new motorway. An earth retaining structure with a near vertical face was required to support the new dual three-lane carriageway, which would allow the traffic to be switched to it while the old section was filled.

The conventional technique using extensive sheet piling along the embankment and for the bridge abutments to relieve lateral thrust would have been time consuming, and access for the equipment could have disrupted traffic flow.

Tensar developed a quick-to-install reinforced earth solution. With minimal disturbance to vehicles it temporarily supported the new south-bound embankment, bridge wing walls and abutments.

The contractor explained that as a temporary sacrificial structure, this was by far the best option and less expensive than other methods available.

The solution comprised compacted fill reinforced with layers of Tensar's uniaxial geogrid, securely connected to steel mesh facing units to form a 100m length of the 85˚ earth retaining structure up to 152 3M high; site won fill was used for this section.

For the bridge abutments and wing walls, a 26m length of vertical faced TR2 face, using imported granular fill and uniaxial geogrids, was built up to 9.5m. At either end of the embankment, a 45˚ slope was constructed using Tensartech.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Building Spain's highest viaduct
    July 9, 2012
    Amid a mountain wilderness, a new highway system rises, featuring Spain's highest viaduct For years, motorists and truck drivers in northern Spain have had to endure using a dangerous road liable to traffic hold-ups, delays and accidents, and frequently impassable in the depths of winter. In any event it is a slow and tortuous climb from Molledo on the Cantabrian lowlands up the N-611 road through the Cantabrian Mountains to Palencia, on the Meseta, Spain's high central plateau.
  • Geosynthetics stabilise differential settlement
    May 3, 2012
    The ongoing Highways Agency A66 Carkin Moor to Scotch Corner project involves upgrading the original single carriageway to address safety concerns, particularly at junctions and crossings. Where differential settlement is threatening a remodelled junction, Tensar International's new TriAx geogrid provides an additional dimension of stability, saving design and build contractors Balfour Beatty Regional Civil Engineering Limited (BBRCEL) the heavy time and costs inherent in conventional remedial solutions and
  • Geosynthetics stabilise differential settlement
    March 14, 2012
    The ongoing Highways Agency A66 Carkin Moor to Scotch Corner project involves upgrading the original single carriageway to address safety concerns, particularly at junctions and crossings. Where differential settlement is threatening a remodelled junction, Tensar International's new TriAx geogrid provides an additional dimension of stability, saving design and build contractors Balfour Beatty Regional Civil Engineering Limited (BBRCEL) the heavy time and costs inherent in conventional remedial solutions and
  • Tensar’s route to Euro 2012
    July 20, 2012
    Tensar International’s TriAx design solution has been used in the sub-base for the 17.9km Gdansk bypass in Poland. TriAx is said to be helping to combat the differential settlement across the poor soil of the Wistula river delta and to minimise frost heave caused by Poland’s severe winters. TriAx is said to be helping to combat the differential settlement across the poor soil of the Wistula river delta and to minimise frost heave caused by Poland’s severe winters.