Skip to main content

Steel wire barriers provide rock fall protection

In Gibraltar, where the entire population lives on or close to the huge limestone rock that gives the nation its name, the issue of rock fall protection is taken very seriously. Here, a scheme to install a network of rock fall catchment fences has just been completed, which will allow the re-opening of a critically important road at the south-eastern end of the Rock, which was closed following a significant rock fall occurrence in 2002.
February 6, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
The fence posts are positioned down-slope with steel cables fixed to back-stay anchors, securely fixed in a reversed v-formation, up-slope of the fence run
In Gibraltar, where the entire population lives on or close to the huge limestone rock that gives the nation its name, the issue of rock fall protection is taken very seriously.

Here, a scheme to install a network of rock fall catchment fences has just been completed, which will allow the re-opening of a critically important road at the south-eastern end of the Rock, which was closed following a significant rock fall occurrence in 2002.

Dave Crowther technical manager for rock fall protection specialists, 1589 Maccaferri explains.

The potential dangers of rock fall in this and other areas of the Rock were already known and the Gibraltar government had previously commissioned consultants 1590 Golder Associates to advise them on rock fall protection.

Consequently, Golder Associates proposed a combination of mitigation measures to provide protection for the 500m long stretch of road leading up to the Dudley Ward Tunnel entrance, site of the previous rock fall incident. These included an extended rock fall canopy over the tunnel entrance, passive rock fall catch ditches cut into the lower slope immediately above the road, and a network of high resistance catch fences.

The catch fence scheme, valued at some £1 million (E1.1 million) was undertaken by contractor 1593 CAN Geotechnical. Three fences were installed; firstly a 200m long section split into three lengths, plus a second 70m long and a third 90m long run.

The element design and supply of the catch fences was put to Oxford, UK-based rock fall protection specialists Maccaferri, who proposed a network of the company's 5m high, CTR 30-04-A Barriers, capable of withstanding 3,000kJ (kilojoules) impacts. This is one of the company's highest capacity barriers, the highest being capable of containing impacts of up to 5,000kJ, the equivalent of stopping a 16.5tonne truck travelling at over 90km/hour.

Catch fence design is now a sophisticated, high-tech process with the development of ever-more efficient systems, capable of absorbing huge amounts of kinetic energy caused by falling debris, [measured in kilojoules/kJ]. Much of the development work is European lead and has resulted in the adoption of a new European testing methodology, ETAG 027 (the European Technical Approval Guideline 027), which sets out the minimum standards for the manufacture, performance and testing of rock fall protection barrier systems used throughout the EU. It also forms the basis of the CE approval process so only rock fall protection systems which pass ETAG 27 can gain CE approval. Compliance will become a legal requirement across Europe.

The Maccaferri system, which is ETAG 027 compliant, comprises a network of continuous, high-strength steel wire, ring panels suspended at 10m intervals from 5m high steel posts. The posts are an integral part of the system but also act as independent components so if one is struck and damaged, adjacent posts accommodate the additional loadings.

The fence panels are positioned down-slope with steel cables fixed to back-stay anchors, securely fixed in a reversed v-formation, up-slope of the fence run. The 5m high fence posts are fixed to articulating brackets which are attached to substantial concrete head-blocks.

During an impact, the system ensures that the energy of the falling rock is dissipated and the rock is prevented from moving any further down the slope. Impact forces are shared among spans so that the stresses on the individual system components are minimised.

Energy dissipaters fitted to the post heads, help absorb impact shock loads. These dissipaters work by absorbing the applied energy by deformation and not by friction.

The catch fence components were supplied to site in prefabricated kits These kits come with the majority of connections, cables and related components factory-fitted to minimise installation variations.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Kapsch secures deal for Westgate Tunnel tolling roadside systems
    June 4, 2019
    Kapsch TrafficCom Australia will deliver the tolling roadside system for the West Gate Tunnel Project under construction in Melbourne, Australia. Kapsch TrafficCom Australia was contracted by CPB Contractors John Holland Joint Venture to deliver the technology. It will be based upon the company’s single gantry multilane free-flow platform and next-generation stereoscopic vision technology for both vehicle detection and classification as well as automatic number plate recognition. “Almost 20 years ago Kaps
  • GPS machine control paves the way for Turkish canal
    February 7, 2012
    GPS machine control for earthworks and concrete paving is helping to fast track construction of an irrigation canal in Turkey - Claire Symes reports. The Turkish economy is expected to flourish as a result of construction of a new irrigation channel currently underway in the east of the country. This canal is benefiting from the latest concrete paving and earthmoving technology and will bring with it prosperity to a deprived area of the country. But the project is already taking the lead in terms of Turkish
  • Tunnel inspections reveal safety compliance need
    May 9, 2012
    Results show the state of Europe's tunnel infrastructure at its 'most sublime and most depressing quality' as Patrick Smith reports. EuroTAP [European Tunnel Assessment Programme] 2010 has unveiled the results of inspections conducted earlier this year in 26 major tunnels in 13 European countries. The on site inspections, carried out between 12 April and 20 May, 2010, are said to indicate that an "alarming number of operational tunnels across Europe will not be ready to comply with EU tunnel safety rules wh
  • Highways: environmental problem or environmental enhancement?
    March 21, 2016
    Highways need not be a blight on the countryside that many people, urban planners included, believe they will always be. By Bram Miller, director, and Martin Broderick, environmental consultant, at Ramboll Environ While the world’s highway networks bring undoubted economic and social benefits, they are generally perceived to lead to negative environmental impacts. Some may consider this an unfair reputation, but it is difficult to argue that in the majority of cases both the construction and operation of