2004-5 Pipe

 

Home

Projects

Background

2004 07 27 Heavy Rain

2004 08 30 Tropical Storm Gaston

Day 1 - Our Sandbox Toys are Bigger than Yours

Sandbox toys, day 3

Sandbox toys, day 4

Sandbox toys, 2004 12 22

Sandbox Toys, 2004 12 28

2004 12 29, More Cutting

2004 12 30 Second Cut, Headwall Starts

2005 01 03 Sandbox Toys

2005 01 04 Pipe Install

2005 01 05 Pipe Install

2005 01 06 Pipe Install

2005 01 07 Pipe Install

2005 01 10 Pipe Install

2005 01 11 Pipe Install

2005 01 12 Pipe Install

2005 01 13 Pipe Install

2005 01 17 Pipe Install, Last Sections

2005 01 18 Riprap In, Old Pipe Out

2005 01 19 Riprap In, Headwall Dig, Snow

2005 01 21 Headwall Pour Starts

2005 01 24 Headwall Forms Work

2005 01 25 Headwall Forms Work

2005 01 26 Headwall Forms Work, Headwall Poured

2005 01 27, Riprap, Drive Repaired

2005 01 28, Headwall Finished

2005 04 02 It Works

2005 04 15, Last Riprap, Grading

2005 04 18 Grout, Topsoil, Grading

2005 04 19 Topsoil, Grading, Grass

 

 

2005 01 26 Headwall Forms Work, Headwall Poured

Prev Next

Today there were really only two things that happened ..some more small riprap was put in place at the tail end of the new pipe. You've seen this all before and it did not take long, so no photos.

The second was the completion of the forms for the headwall structure. This took most of the day. The crew of 10 concrete workers showed up about 7:15 and were at it until 3:30, when the concrete truck arrived. Here's a long sequence of snaps of the forms going up.

 

 

The stream is still being diverted directly into the pipe and being pumped out of the bottom of the hole.

 

This is basically a 12 foot wide by 6 foot tall room that tapers to about 8 feet wide at the back. The concrete roof is about a foot thick.

 

There is a lot of metal in this structure.

And it has a nice little two foot tall wall at the front.

 

Concrete arrives. I was told that about 7.5 cubic yards of concrete went into this.

It was all poured from the top, and the long concrete vibrators were used to drive it down into the walls. Those things make a very loud buzzing hum and really make the concrete flow.

More more more ..

 

The forms probably took 10 people 12-14 hours to build, but then only 45 minutes to fill with concrete and finish.

And finishing ..

And more finishing ..

With a little brushwork so we don't fall off walking on the icy smooth headwall in the winter..

And finally all put to bed.

Perhaps tomorrow this gets stripped off and filled in. A yard drain has to be poured a couple of sections of pipe into the yard from this structure, and then some large rocks have to go into the stream in front of it, but basically that will be the end of the heavy work.

Prev Next