October 2009 Vol. 64 No. 10
Features
Large Steel Water Main Project Pushes Static Bursting Envelope
Static pipebursting continues to flex its trenchless muscles in projects around the United States.
The method has received a great deal of attention recently in regards to the usage of various product pipe materials, which has made static bursting more accessible and acceptable. A recent project for Colorado Springs Utilities, Colorado Springs, CO, however, has turned the attention back to the method’s ability to take on tough projects and large diameter host pipes.
Colorado Springs Utilities provides water, wastewater, natural gas and electricity service to over 600,000 combined metered accounts. The utility’s potable water system consists of 1,780 miles of water mains. A portion of that system is comprised of steel mains installed in the 1950s.
For 15 years, the utility has been battling with a deteriorating 2,500 foot, 24 inch steel, coal tar-coated water transmission main that runs under one of Colorado Springs’ busiest thoroughfares, Galley Road. Crews have been patching the main for years with a variety of different temporary fixes including screws, wood plugs, welded patches and other materials. Its high traffic location and disruption factor prevented the utility from moving forward with a conventional open cut remove and replace solution.
Trenchless contractor Global Underground Corporation, Colorado Springs, has an annual maintenance contract with the utility and approached them with the idea of utilizing trenchless pipebursting to replace the failing main.
Global Underground President Robert Meadows said, “They have been talking about replacing this main for three years. They had been repairing the main with every method possible to keep it in service. They just looked at it and said ‘this is how many dollars we’re spending to maintain this water main every year and it’s time to just replace it.’
“It was a design build project and we were involved from the beginning. We did look at directional drilling as well, but there’s just no room down this street as the existing utilities have filled up the right of way. In order to get this water main in there, it was either going to be remove and replace, open cut or pipebursting.”
Milestone project
The 24 inch diameter steel pipe represents one of the largest steel pipe bursting projects ever attempted and a significant milestone for static pipe bursting. For the project, Global Underground utilized a Grundoburst 2500G static pipe bursting system from trenchless equipment manufacturer TT Technologies, Aurora, IL. The unit is the largest static pipebursting machine in the world, delivering up to 625,000 pounds of pulling force.
Global Underground is an industry leader in underground utility installation, utilizing horizontal directional drilling, pipe bursting, open excavation and hydro excavation methods. The company was started in 1999 and boasts a skilled staff with over 100 years of combined experience installing utilities. Meadows said, “We do everything water, sewer, gas, electric, petroleum, fiber optics, on grade sewer, etc.”
Meadows described their primary business as unconventional utility construction. That includes hydro excavation, sliplining, pipebursting and HDD. The company has 11 directional drills ranging in size from 7,000 to 440,000-pounds of pullback, and have completed pipebursting projects from four to 26- inches in diameter
Static bursting matures
In order to take on a project of this size in a high traffic area, Meadows decided on a method that is growing in use and popularity. According to TT Technologies pipebursting specialist Dave Holcomb, the static pipe bursting method has come a long way since its inception.
“We’ve seen the static pipe bursting process continue to gain momentum in the industry – it’s matured,” Holcomb observed. “It’s become more versatile now that great progress has been made in using various product pipe materials such as ductile iron, fusible PVC, HDPE and clay. But, as this project in Colorado Springs demonstrates, the capability of the method to take on difficult host pipe materials is also a reason that static pipebursting has become a sought after rehab and replacement method.”
Several things contribute to the effectiveness of the method. Specially designed bladed rollers are one important component. The bladed rollers are pulled through the host pipe by a hydraulically-powered bursting unit. As they are pulled through, they split the host pipe. An expander attached to the rollers forces the fragmented pipe into the surrounding soil while simultaneously pulling in the new pipe.
The bursting rods are also critical to successful static pipebursting. Holcomb said, “Quicklock style rods are securely linked instead of screwed together like traditional drill stems or other static systems. We’ve found that this system provides the optimum in terms of strength of connection and elimination of rod torque. This style of rod also speeds installation and breakdown because the rods are easily and quickly removed at the exit pit as bursting is in operation. There’s no time wasted screwing and unscrewing rods or having to deal with a potentially dangerous high torsion situation. Plus, in certain situations, you place the bursting unit in the middle of two runs and actually rod the second run by passing the rods through the back of the bursting unit while bursting the first run. Global Underground was able to take advantage of that technique during their project and it saved them a significant amount of time.”
Project layout
The total length of bursting was 2,529 feet. The main ran under a highly traveled roadway in Colorado Springs. Meadows said, “Galley Road is a major street. I’m not sure exactly what the traffic volume is, but closing that east/west corridor would have been a real problem for the city. It’s normally two lanes of traffic in each direction; we were able to keep one lane open in each direction with the pipebursting application.”
The water main feeds a water tank on the east side of town. Colorado Springs Utilities was able to shut the water main down for the duration of this project by feeding that tank through alternate routes. This eliminated the need for bypass pumping and helped Global Underground and Colorado Springs Utilities crews keep disruption to a minimum.
The 2,500 foot run was divided into five sections. According to Meadows, soil conditions were hard to pin down. “Sections of this main had been dug up so many times over the years, we never knew what we’d encounter. The soil conditions changed constantly. Within a couple of feet you could go from tight clay to sand. For us, the project was remove and replace [the spoil] with select fill, road base.”
Typical launch and exit pits measured 40-feet long and 12-feet wide at depths up to 14 feet. Global crews were aiming for runs over 500 feet, but as Meadows explained, no one knew what to expect, especially when considering the diameter of the pipe and the coal tar coating.
“We weren’t sure how the machine was going to pull,” Meadows related. “We really didn’t know because of this material – welded steel; there are no joints and the coating inside of the pipe created an issue. On the first couple of pulls, coal tar coating built up in front of the expander. We ended up having to excavate and clean the material out before we could continue pulling. So, we made some adjustments to the cutter wheels and used some pipe soap. We put the soap on the front of the expander head and it prevented the tar from sticking to itself and balling up in front of the expander.”
Results
Ultimately, Global Underground crews completed runs of 466, 517, 496, 430 and 620 feet. The Colorado Springs Utilities in-house crews completed the excavation and backfill. Global Underground and CSU crews worked together on the tie ins. The two organizations worked simultaneously to keep the project moving forward and on schedule. Actual bursting time was eight to 10 hours for the first sections because of the issues with the coal tar coating. Bursting times dropped significantly to three hours per run after the crews made adjustments to compensate for the coal tar coating.
“We knew there would be a lot of challenges with this project and that it was the largest project ever done for this size material. The teamwork between Global Underground and Colorado Springs Utilities was tremendous. And the technical support from TT Technologies through this challenging burst was exceptional,” Meadows said.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Global Underground Corporation, (719) 471-7414, www.globalug.com
TT Technologies, (800) 533-2078, www.tttechnologies.com
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