June 23, 2003
Sewerage &Water Board's
Major Upgrade of Sewer System
Proceeding on Schedule; Construction, Testing Underway
The Sewerage and Water Board (S&WB)
of New Orleans began a major rehabilitation and capacity upgrade
of its aging sewage collection system in 1996, following a public
hearing to obtain citizen input on the plan.
Like most of the nation's major metropolitan areas, New Orleans'
underground water and sewer systems are at least 40 years old
and, in many cases, up to 100 years old. Factors common to this
area, such as unstable soil conditions and large numbers of tree
roots, contribute to a higher-than-normal number of breaks and
deterioration of the sewer pipes.
At the public meeting, the S&WB's staff and consultants provided
details of the now $600 million multi-year program to the public,
environmental, preservation and neighborhood groups, elected officials
and the news media.
The SSERP, or the Sewer System Evaluation and Rehabilitation Program,
was eventually incorporated into the consent decree the S&WB
signed with the EPA in 1998. At that time, timetables and deadlines
were established for the work in each district.
The S&WB selected Montgomery Watson Harza (MWH), a global
leader in large capital program management, to serve as SSERP
program manager. MWH's program management experience includes
planning and management of design and construction of extensive
sewer rehabilitation-related projects in Houston, Baton Rouge,
Miami and San Francisco.
In addition, the S&WB sought out EPA Federal grants to support
the program totaling approximately $100 million over 10 years.
The $100 million has been authorized by Congress. To date the
Sewerage and Water Board has received $38.8 million in Federal
Funds.
Rebuilding New Orleans' Underground
Currently, the sewage collection system services an area of approximately
86 square miles and a population of approximately 497,000. It
consists of over 1,600 miles of gravity collection and trunk sewers
ranging in size from 8 inches to 84 inches in diameter and over
100 miles of force mains ranging in size from 6 inches to 72 inches
in diameter. There are 83 pump stations which help convey wastewater
to the City's two wastewater treatment plants, one on the East
Bank and one on the West Bank (Algiers) of the Mississippi River
with a combined capacity of 132 million gallons per day (mgd).
The SSERP program will rehabilitate this wastewater system using
state-of-the-art trenchless and traditional methods. The trenchless
methods allow for rehabilitation of buried pipe and manholes without
the need for excavation and the disturbance to residents that
it causes.
The project is divided into ten districts. Each year, one of
these districts will undergo a system evaluation survey that will
result in an estimated $12 to $47 million in sewer structural
rehabilitation needs. This comprehensive study includes smoke
and dyed water testing, flow and rainfall monitoring, manhole
inspections and surveys, and closed circuit televising (CCTV)
of approximately 35 percent of the system. Sonar technology is
also employed to determine the condition of sewer lines that cannot
be de-watered.
In fact, SSERP engineers developed a computerized decision model
to automatically determine a cost-effective rehabilitation method
from encoded CCTV data. Engineers record detail sewer data for
each study area -- such as location, size and current conditions
-- using a closed-circuit television recording device. That
data is electronically transferred to the computer decision model,
where algorithms determine efficient repair methods based on existing
conditions and the S&WB's rehabilitation strategy. This process
has helped reduce design time and costs so more dollars can be
utilized for rehabilitation measures.
Early Efforts Completed On-time and Within
Budget
So far, sewer evaluation surveys have been completed in the Lakeview
and Gentilly districts located adjacent to Lake Pontchartrain,
Uptown, Lower Ninth Ward, Carrollton, and in the Central Business
District, Warehouse District and French Quarter (CBD/WD/FQ) areas.
Survey efforts in the New Orleans East district were initiated
in early 2003.
The Lakeview area district sewer structural rehabilitation was
completed at the end of 2001. These efforts included manhole
rehabilitation, gravity sewer pipe lining, excavated point repairs
and replacement, resulting in the rehabilitation of some 2,000
manholes and over 163,000 feet of sewer line.
Marcia St. Martin, interim executive director of the Sewerage
& Water Board, explained: "We've learned a lot during
the rehabilitation of this first district. Our contractors and
suppliers need to offer speed and versatility to support this
massive job in the turnaround that we need to support the stringent
EPA guidelines."
In addition to the Lakeview area, construction activity in the
Central Business District/French Quarter district is well underway.
Work in this area includes cleaning and televising over 300,000
feet of sewer line, rehabilitating some 650 manholes and nearly
70,000 feet of sewer line.
Contractors are rehabilitating aging sanitary sewer manholes through
the addition of lightweight cementitious lining, replacing frames
and covers, installing flexible corbel seals, and simply raising
of covers to match adjacent ground levels. These adjustments
are very extensive due to New Orleans' dynamic soil conditions.
D&O Contractors, Inc. of Kenner, Louisiana, was charged with
rehabilitating nearly 1,200 of these manholes in the Lakeview
area district, relying on lightweight cementitious liner to complete
the job. SSERP engineers selected cementitious liners because
the application and installation are effective, straightforward
and relatively quick. The rehabilitation effort for another 800
manholes in the Lakeview district was completed by E.B. Feucht
and Sons of Eunice, Louisiana.
Prior to the installation, each manhole is cleaned with a minimum
3500 pounds per square inch (psi) hot water pressure wash and
steam. Next, the lining is applied through a spray process and
troweled smooth. Then crews apply a flexible urethane coating
to seal the lining on the wall to the metal casting. This seal
allows expansion and contraction while remaining water tight within
the manhole wall structure, which is stationary and expands at
a different rate than the metal casting.
In terms of gravity sewer pipe rehabilitation, the job is much
larger.
Crews from Boh Brothers Construction Co., LLC, of New Orleans,
Insituform Technologies, Inc. of Hammond, Louisiana, and Fleming
Construction Company of Metairie, Louisiana, as of May 2003, have
completed cured-in-place manhole-to-manhole lining of over 200,000
lineal feet of existing sanitary sewer (8-inch to 30-inch diameter)
as part of the contracts awarded through the SSERP program.
The SSERP projects began in May 1999 and, according to contract
guidelines, required the teams to meet interim milestones during
the project timeline. Failure to complete the designated rehabilitation
or reconstruction activities may have resulted in significant
monetary penalties. All contracts for sewer rehabilitation performed
under the SSERP have met all required milestones resulting in
no penalties for non-compliance. The majority of the effort is
focused on trenchless pipeline reconstruction but also includes
excavated point repairs, the rehabilitation of service laterals,
site video work and the conventional excavated replacement.
Much of the trenchless pipeline reconstruction will be accomplished
using a polyester felt liner impregnated with resin and inverted
into the damaged pipe with water, then cured in place with hot
water to the shape of the host pipe. During the installation process,
the resin is forced into cracks, joints and other irregularities
of the host pipe to form a mechanical lock between the host pipe
and the liner that holds them firmly in place. After the new pipe
has cured, service lateral lines will be reopened with a remote-controlled
robotic cutter.
Additional contracts for the rehabilitation of the remaining 40,000
lineal feet of existing sewers to be rehabilitated in the Central
Business District will be completed by the end of 2005.
Sewer design and structural rehabilitation activities in the Gentilly
area began in July 2001. The rehabilitation work in this area
includes rehabilitating some 1,600 manholes and 163,000 feet of
sewer line. The contracts are being performed by D&O Contractors,
Boh Brothers Construction, and Wallace C. Drennan of New Orleans,
Louisiana, and Roland Pugh Construction Birmingham, Alabama.
The Sewer Rehabilitation Future
Surveys in the remaining districts will be conducted at a rate
of one per year, with the final survey scheduled for completion
in 2006. In addition, planning is ongoing for numerous capacity
related projects, which will provide for improved hydraulic capacity
to pump stations and force mains. Actual construction and remedial
work in the nine districts on the East Bank must be completed
by 2010, according to consent decree requirements.
Thus far, the Sewerage and Water Board and its contractors have
met the tight consent decree timeline for the initial phases of
the project--most ahead of schedule. In addition, the traffic
delays along several major avenues were cut in half by the use
of trenchless technology.
At this time, discussions of future funding options are underway
by the S&WB, its financial advisors and bond counsel. The
future of SSERP, naturally, depends on the availability of funds
to complete the projects and complete them in accordance with
EPA deadlines to avoid large fines of up to $15,000 per day.
The S&WB has kept the public informed of the SSERP projects
through billing inserts, its website, news releases, media briefings,
public hearings and meetings, special neighborhood meetings and
participation in meetings scheduled by the Mayor or councilpersons.
Because of the high visibility of smoke and dyed water testing
and televising of the sewer lines, the S&WB schedules special
demonstrations of the tests prior to work beginning. Invited to
the demonstrations are area residents, neighborhood and civic
associations, environmental groups, elected officials and the
media.
To date, over $93 million has been expended for work identified
under the SSERP. In addition, the following inspection and rehabilitation
efforts have been completed so far:
* 5.1 million feet of sanitary sewer pipe have been inspected;
* Over 291,000 feet of sewer pipe have been rehabilitated;
* Over 19,200 sewer manholes have been inspected; and
* Over 2,600 sewer manholes have been rehabilitated.
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