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MAY/JUNE 2005:

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Features: What We Build — May/June 2005

The Key to Commerce

The multi-year McAlpine Replacement Lock project will speed up commercial traffic on the Ohio River through the port of Louisville

By Sheila Bacon

In March, a tug collided with one of the circular cofferdam cells at the new lock, closing the river to commerce for three days.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Louisville District

Keeping the Ohio River open for navigation during construction of a new $358-million lock near Louisville, Ky., is of utmost importance to the project team.

On March 30, crews found out just how important that really is.

A tugboat and barges preparing to pass through the existing McAlpine Lock immediately adjacent to the future lock's site hit the cofferdam surrounding the construction and ripped a 10-ft by 15-ft gash in the exterior steel sheets. The accident not only shut down construction while emergency repairs were made, it also closed down river traffic for three days. By the time the lock was repaired and ready for use, 43 tugs and their loads had backed up along the river.

"There was constant traffic through here for several days," says Dave Klinstiver, a resident engineer with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' Louisville District.

The incident was a sobering reminder to the construction team of the historic lock's ongoing importance and the problems that result when river traffic is blocked.

The original McAlpine Lock was built in the 1860s in a canal dug parallel to the Ohio River, bypassing a 2.5-mile-long series of rapids that made the river impossible to navigate during the dry season. A larger 110-ft by 600-ft lock was built next to the original lock in 1921, and the current 110-ft by 1,200-ft lock, still in use today, was built in 1961. The lock now under construction will mirror the larger one and replaces the two smaller chambers.

Closing Doors

Before construction started on the replacement lock, boats were able to use the 600-ft lock whenever the larger one was closed. Although tugs with large loads would have to send their cargo through the smaller lock in two trips, its availability was a "safety net" of sorts. Now, with no back-up lock, the 43 million tons of freight that pass through McAlpine Locks annually will depend solely on the one operational chamber until construction is completed in 2008.

Eighteen to 20 tows pass through the lock each day, with each trip averaging nearly an hour. The new lock will alleviate the demands placed on the main chamber, which currently is operating at full capacity.

Interstate 564 (at bottom) is all that separates the McAlpine Lock Replacement construction site from a residential neighborhood.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Louisville District

Several years of preconstruction and demolition work (see related story) has preceded the current contract, which involves site excavation and construction of the lock itself. The work is being done by the joint venture TGM Constructors, comprised of Traylor Brothers Inc., Evansville, Ind.; Granite Construction, Watsonville, Calif.; and Massman Construction, Kansas City, Mo. TGM started blasting rock in 2003 after the cofferdam was built and the water inside was drained. In some areas, the excavation has reached 25 ft below the canal bed to make way for the concrete monoliths that will form each side of the lock. They are 46-ft to 55-ft wide and 67-ft to 100-ft tall. There will be 23 on one side of the canal and 25 on the other.

Construction of the lock's monoliths began in June 2004 and involves the placement of more than 250,000 cu yd of conventional concrete in 10-ft lifts. In some areas, roller-compacted concrete is being used, something that has never before been attempted in lock construction in the U.S., says Jim Whitworth, TGM's project engineer.

RCC is a zero-slump, highly durable mix most often used in large-scale industrial projects such as sorting yards and warehouse facilities. In recent years its use has been expanded to a variety of other uses, including dams. The concrete is placed in a manner similar to that of asphalt, using high-density paving equipment and compaction with steel-drum and pneumatic-tire rollers.

Crews are placing approximately 133,000 cu yd of RCC, which will save time and money. The nature of the mix allows crews to place concrete in continuous 24 hour shifts without stopping for it to cure. As a result, crews were able to place 7,000 yd of RCC in just two-and-a-half days, considerably faster than conventional concrete, says Whitworth.

No Cookie Cutter

Though the monoliths are similar in size, their construction is by no means "cookie cutter," says Klinstiver. Each monolith has its own unique characteristics and lift drawing. Some have tunnels through them to allow water flow into the locks. Others have voids for the routing of conduit. Some are taller, depending on foundation conditions. The monoliths on either end of the lock are constructed to hold the miter gates that let boats and barges in and out of the chamber. The first set of gates, fabricated off site in three sections, is scheduled to arrive on site in June, with the downstream gates to be installed in the fall.

In some areas, excavation has reached 25 ft below the canal bed to make way for the monoliths that will line the new lock.

PHOTOS COURTESY OF U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Louisville District

Once the concrete monoliths forming the sides of the lock are completed, crews will construct three control buildings that will house equipment to operate the locks. Next, the lock's approach walls will be built atop sheet piling caissons filled with tremie concrete.

Full construction of the approach walls will require the removal of the cofferdam, which Klinstiver anticipates will be in early 2008. Cofferdam deconstruction is a meticulous process. First, water will be pumped back into the cofferdam until its level matches that of the canal. Then the sand within the cofferdam cells will be removed. Finally, an eye will be cut into each sheet of the 16 cells to lift the sheets out, one by one.
Recycle and Reuse

The McAlpine Lock Replacement has reused or redirected tons of materials from other projects, including debris from demolition of the old 600-ft lock. The concrete was transported to a Corps' bank stabilization project along the river, saving 105,000 cu yd of debris from landfills, says Klinstiver. Sheet piles used in earlier construction at the Olmstead Locks, also along the river, were reused at McAlpine, saving $3 million.

Some of the sandstone blocks used in the construction of the original 1860s lock were salvaged and passed on to the Louisville parks department for road projects. Others will be displayed at the visitors' center at the new lock's site as a tribute to lock construction on the Ohio River through the years.

A Multi-Phased Project
A Gateway for Commerce
What a Blast


 

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