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Spillway Detail

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GoldDredger

Civil/Environmental
Joined
Jan 16, 2008
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172
I've come across an interesting situation, let me give some background.

Three 48" road culverts convey upstream flow between two private lots before reaching the river. The soil characteristics are sandy silt with little cohesive strength.

The drainage shed is approximately 130 acres, with a current 100 year flow of about 180 cfs (recently experienced). The future build out upstream will increase that flow to about 400 cfs.

The channel between the two lots is experiencing extreme erosion, much to the chagrin of the two owners. We will propose a concrete or armored channel for the majority of length between the culverts and river.

However, there is one area which coincides with the historic 100 year WSE of the river, where a large drop off is evident.(see picture attached) The picture is a bit misleading, the drop from top to bottom is about 25 feet.

We will have some fill brougt in to raise the bottom and begin the channel, however I plan on designing a spillway from the top to toe at this drop area.

Can anyone refer me to some standard details for spillways. I was thinking maybe an ogee spillway design with a trapeziodal channel at each end. Or, perhaps just a linear channel down the slope, but I am worried about the hydraulic jumps where the flow will likely go from sub-super-sub critical.

Anyway, I am looking for a detail of a spillway.
 
GoldDredger;
You may want to consult FHWA's HEC 14 for energy dissipators. I deal with similar situations quite often. I have prepared counter measures using concrete and riprap/gabions. The extent of the structure is dependant on the topography and hydraulic charateristics. Typically, I would design a spillway with an energy dissipator at the bottom. Looks like a great project.
 
You could check in the BOR Small Dams Manual for some spillway designs.

 
Bureau of Reclamation Engineering Monograph No. 25, "Hydraulic Design of Stilling Basins and Energy Dissipators"
 
Curious as to who is paying for the fix? The reason I ask is I had a similar situation that was being addressed by the City. Turned out to be cheaper to buy one of homes and knock it down rather than construction a substantial conveyance structure.
 
Thanks for the posts. They put me on track with some research and I found even more information.

I could not find information on 'BOR small dams manual', what does BOR stand for?

As far as paying for this fix, it appears it will be the homeowners association. They are the ones who own the drainage easement and are responsible for it's maintenance. It will be an expensive proposition for them unfortunately, but I don't believe as expensive as buying the homes would be.
 
BOR = Bureau of Reclamation - more commonly shortened to USBR
 
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