Skip to main content

'Soft' option gets results

Soft engineering techniques, used to prevent soil erosion and stabilise steep cuts and embankments, have allowed engineers to successfully widen the M1 motorway in the UK. Over the 50km length of the work (25km northbound, 25km southbound) on a busy section of the motorway near the city of Nottingham, a total of 48km of slopes had to be modified, split roughly between cutting and embankment. The UK Highways Agency requirements for the work meant that wholesale widening of the corridor was not possible: the
February 8, 2012 Read time: 4 mins
Soft engineering techniques, used to prevent soil erosion and stabilise steep cuts and embankments, have allowed engineers to successfully widen the M1 motorway in the UK.

Over the 50km length of the work (25km northbound, 25km southbound) on a busy section of the motorway near the city of Nottingham, a total of 48km of slopes had to be modified, split roughly between cutting and embankment.

The 1441 UK Highways Agency requirements for the work meant that wholesale widening of the corridor was not possible: the road's overall footprint could not be extended. Land clearance within it had to be minimised and balanced relative to the needs of the agreed environmental impact statement [EIS].

This included building within the constraints of a no-contraflow construction and limited width of widening; providing a solution that would maximise replanting; ensuring topsoil retention and a vegetated finish on steep slopes; and minimising waste and offsite disposal/importation of materials.

Consulting engineers Gifford WSP was designer for MVM, a joint venture partnership between Morgan Est, Vinci and Sir Robert McAlpine. The team developed a hierarchy of solutions to allow maximum utilisation of the existing motorway corridor, including the re-profiling of cuts and embankments to accommodate the required, eight-lane plus hard-shoulder motorway.

Construction solutions were applied based on the geometry at each location: some locations were identified as being of higher environmental sensitivity, and consequently land clearance had to be kept to an absolute minimum.

At each location, solutions were cost assessed and an appropriate treatment adopted. Target cost solutions were tested against EIS criteria, with a degree of flexibility allowed to achieve an overall balance.

In cuttings, the sequence was general earthworks: low-height gabion retaining structures and then soil nailing/geotextile erosion protection matting.
On embankments, the sequence involved general earthworks, steep earthworks using selected, high-strength granular fill and topsoil with erosion protection materials. Finally, there were hard retaining structures.

Andy Rose, technical director geotechnics at Gifford, explained: "Close interaction between highways/structures/environmental specialists and geotechnical designers was essential to provide the optimum solutions and, at an early stage, specialist geotechnical suppliers were engaged.

"When extending a cut, removal of the toe of the slope generally means that the overall slope becomes less stable. The steepened slope may be stable in the short-term but it will require strengthening to ensure long-term stability." Rapid establishment of vegetative cover to the newly formed slopes was also a priority for the construction team." Geotechnical and erosion control advice on a significant proportion of the works was provided by specialists 1589 Maccaferri.

Initially, its gabion retaining structures and rock-fall containment netting were supplied but, as work progressed, a wider range of systems from the company were introduced including soil retention, erosion protection and other 'soft' slope stabilisation systems.

A steepened slope solution using soft measures is approximately one-sixth the cost of a traditional, 'hard' retaining wall solution such as masonry or in situ concrete walls, and offers far greater flexibility to adapt to site conditions, so the designers were keen to exploit the benefits of these measures.

The Maccaferri erosion protection systems, Enkamat and Biomac, were used to overlay exposed cut faces of typically of 2-3m height and in places up to 6m high. Some 38,000m² was installed in combination with over 7,000 soil nails, bored into the retained slope to strengthen it and anchor the material in place.

Enkamat is a non-woven geotextile matting of thick polyamide filaments which is designed to be secured over the vulnerable slope face to prevent surface erosion by run-off. Over 90% of the volume of the mat is voids and is therefore available for soil filling, maximising the potential for establishing vegetation on the slope.

Biomac is a biodegradable erosion protection blanket made from natural fibres such as coir or a coir-straw mix. When secured to the soil slope, it offers immediate erosion protection to the soil during the establishment phase of seeding and planting.

The further problem of how to retain topsoil on the steepened slopes was addressed with the application of an expanding cellular soil containment system, also from Maccaferri, called Armater, which creates a continuous grid of 100mm deep pockets that holds topsoil. When seeded, root growth binds the soil layer together and to the underlying materials, preventing it from slumping down the steeply sloping site.

On the steepened embankment slopes, at certain locations up to 8m in height with the steepened and widened sections representing between 30-50% of this height, some 35,000m² of topsoil required such assisted retention: over the project the volume of total excavation exceeded 320,000m².

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • BOMAG broadens milling machine line-up
    January 6, 2017
    BOMAG is broadening its range of milling machines in North America with the addition of its rear rotor design BM -35 series. This is the second generation of BOMAG’s milling machines and is available in three basic variants, the BM 1000 -35, 1200 -35, and 1300 -35. According to BOMAG this new range offers advances in operator comfort, precision controls and an innovative exclusive cutter system.
  • BOMAG broadens milling machine line-up
    January 28, 2014
    BOMAG is broadening its range of milling machines in North America with the addition of its rear rotor design BM -35 series. This is the second generation of BOMAG’s milling machines and is available in three basic variants, the BM 1000 -35, 1200 -35, and 1300 -35. According to BOMAG this new range offers advances in operator comfort, precision controls and an innovative exclusive cutter system.
  • Strong attendance points to a successful bauma China show
    December 17, 2014
    Even heavy rain showers on the first day of the bauma China exhibition in Shanghai did not dissuade the crowds packing the outside exhibition areas - Mike Woof writes Those firms exhibiting at bauma China 2014 in Shanghai benefited from a strong show that attracted a record attendance of 191,000, an increase of 6% over the 2012 event. A wide array of new equipment was on show from the 3,104 firms exhibiting, an increase of 14% from 2012. There was a strong focus on technology and new engines required for
  • Strengthen it with Sika’s CarboDur
    February 5, 2020
    Rather than use steel reinforcement to strengthen columns, beams, slabs and wall, specifiers are turning to carbon fibre, according to Switzerland-based Sika.