September 2009

Underground and Under Budget

New trench technologies are delivering far safer excavation and never-before-seen savings in time and labor.

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Photo: CME

By Carol Wasson

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This is a time of breakthrough after breakthrough in the trench-protection industry. That’s great news for those who champion safety—and it’s also something to celebrate in challenging economic times, as contractors are finding that innovative shoring and shielding solutions are the very reason that underground construction projects are increasingly coming in under budget.

Paul McDonnell, senior vice president of United Rentals Trench Safety, sums it up best in a recent industry white paper when he says that new technologies have expanded choices for excavation support systems and have added a financial incentive for using them. “Unlike conventional trench protective methods that can add time and cost, these state-of-the-art technologies are designed to drive productivity and efficiency. The selection and proper use of optimal trench safety systems have become not only the right thing to do but also the financially sound thing to do,” he says.

Companies such as Efficiency Production, Foresight Products, GME, ICON Group, Speed Shore, Trench Shoring Services, and United Rentals Trench Safety are some of today’s standouts in the trench-protection industry—and those who have gained a competitive edge by using their new technologies share how and why these systems deliver far greater safety and unprecedented savings in time and labor.

Photo:  United Rentals Trench Safety

Sherwood Construction
The Oklahoma Department of Transportation is working to widen a section of I-44 in Tulsa from four lanes to six. Sherwood Construction is tackling the first phase of construction, a $42 million project in the Perryman Ditch area, where its crews will build a 1.25-mile-long, poured-in-place concrete culvert extending nearly 30 feet underground. As a stormwater drainage system, the culvert starts as three 10-foot-by-10-foot tunnels side by side and expands to three 12-foot-by-16-foot tunnels where it empties into the Arkansas River.

Sherwood Construction is using a hydraulic bracing and sheeting system supplied by the Rogers, AR, branch of United Rentals Trench Safety. “It’s a new technology from the UK that we’ve brought to the US, and one that will be available through any of our 60 locations,” says branch manager Ed Wernsman, referring to 80T and 150T hydraulic struts manufactured by Groundforce Shorco. “This is a hydraulic system which opens the struts, saving time in installation. The contractor can expand it, then retract it, leapfrog it, and send it on down the line. The hydraulic system saves considerable time and money versus the option of a weld-in-place system, or a bench slope which would have required a 200-foot-plus excavation width, rather than their current width of 50 feet,” he says.

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Ron Egge is the office engineer for Sherwood Construction. He estimates that the hydraulic bracing-and-sheeting system will ultimately allow them to finish the 23-month project more than six months ahead of schedule.

“When you’re working in a hole this deep, safety is the biggest issue. In the old days, we used to weld the beams together for support, and there was always that concern over the quality of the welding. Is it good enough? Is it going to hold? With the hydraulic system, we simply drop it in, expand it and lock it into place. It’s certainly a lot easier and faster than having to cut welds out and reweld. It really is the best system we have ever used,” says Egge. Next Page >

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