bobbert
Civil/Environmental
- Sep 13, 2003
- 8
I have used this forum before and received great comments and suggestions. All comments and suggestions are appreciated and welcome.
The project scope contains approximately 15,000 LF of sanitary sewer rehab. to perform.
A cured-in-place method (CIP), such as Insutiform, offers the benefits on making service connections internally. Sliplining procedures do not have an internal service connection method, thus requiring excavation to restore the service.
In a rehab with several hundred service connections, most connections in rear lot residential, CIP appears to be the most cost efficient. With several thousand feet of rehab without service connections sliplining appears to be most efficient.
The question(s): (1) If the project involves a rehab mixture of service connections that make either procedure cost efficient, which process should be chosen? (2) Can anyone help by providing information of the advantages/disadvantages of sliplining in back lot residential situations?
An obvious answer to above question (1) would be split the contracts into two parts, one for CIP and the other for sliplining. However that is not an option, plan preparation expenses, bidding & advertising costs, and multiple contractors in the same space headaches, are the reasons.
Thanks,
Your help would be appreciated.
The project scope contains approximately 15,000 LF of sanitary sewer rehab. to perform.
A cured-in-place method (CIP), such as Insutiform, offers the benefits on making service connections internally. Sliplining procedures do not have an internal service connection method, thus requiring excavation to restore the service.
In a rehab with several hundred service connections, most connections in rear lot residential, CIP appears to be the most cost efficient. With several thousand feet of rehab without service connections sliplining appears to be most efficient.
The question(s): (1) If the project involves a rehab mixture of service connections that make either procedure cost efficient, which process should be chosen? (2) Can anyone help by providing information of the advantages/disadvantages of sliplining in back lot residential situations?
An obvious answer to above question (1) would be split the contracts into two parts, one for CIP and the other for sliplining. However that is not an option, plan preparation expenses, bidding & advertising costs, and multiple contractors in the same space headaches, are the reasons.
Thanks,
Your help would be appreciated.