Pervious Concrete Guide 2009-08-18
Pervious Concrete Guide 2009-08-18
Pervious Concrete Guide 2009-08-18
Version 1.2
Colorado Ready Mixed Concrete Association 6855 South Havana Street Suite 540 Centennial, CO 80112 303-290-0303 [email protected] www.crmca.org
This guide is intended to assist designers specifying the pervious concrete component of a stormwater management system. There are many other components of a stormwater management system that are not addressed in this guide. Hydrological design is beyond the scope of this document. This guide is intended to supplement ACI 522R-06 Pervious Concrete and ACI 522.1-08 Specification for Pervious Concrete Pavement. Specifically, this guide is intended to aid in the design, placement, and curing of pervious concrete pavements located in an arid environment with the potential of freezing and thawing.
Specifiers Guide for Pervious Concrete Pavement Design Version 1.2 Page 2
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Part 1
1.01
References
A. American Concrete Institute 1. ACI 211.3R Guide for Selecting Proportions for No-Slump Concrete 2. ACI 305 Hot Weather Concreting 3. ACI 306 Cold Weather Concreting 4. ACI 522R-06 Pervious Concrete 5. ACI522.1-08 Specification for Pervious Concrete Pavement 6. ACI Flatwork Finisher Certification Program 7. ACI Field Technician Certification Program B. National Ready Mixed Concrete Association 1. NRMCA Pervious Concrete Contractor Certification 2. NRMCA Pervious Concrete Pavements C. American Society for Testing and Materials 1. ASTM C 29 Test for Bulk Density (Unit Weight) and Voids in Aggregate 2. ASTM C 33 Specification for Concrete Aggregates 3. ASTM C 39 Standard Test Method for Compressive Strength of Cylindrical Concrete Specimens 4. ASTM C 42 Test Method for Obtaining and Testing Drilled Cores and Sawed Beams of Concrete 5. ASTM C 94 Specification for Ready-Mixed Concrete 6. ASTM C 117 Test Method for Material Finer than 75-m(No. 200) Sieve in Mineral Aggregates by Washing 7. ASTM C 138 Test Method for Density (Unit Weight). Yield and Air Content (Gravimetric) of Concrete 8. ASTM C 140 Test Methods for Sampling and Testing Concrete Masonry Units and Related Units 9. ASTM C 150 Specification for Portland Cement 10. ASTM C 172 Practice for Sampling Freshly Mixed Concrete 11. ASTM C 260 Specification for Air-Entraining Admixtures for Concrete 12. ASTM C 494 Specification for Chemical Admixtures for Concrete 13. ASTM C 595 Specification for Blended Hydraulic Cements 14. ASTM C 618 Specification for Coal Fly Ash and Raw or Calcined Natural Pozzolan for use as a Mineral Admixture in Portland Cement Concrete 15. ASTM C 989 Specification for Ground Granulated Blast-Furnace Slag for Use in Concrete and Mortars 16. ASTM C 1077 Practice for Laboratories Testing Concrete and Concrete Aggregates for use in Construction and Criteria for Laboratory Evaluation. 17. ASTM C 1116 Standard Specification for Fiber-Reinforced Concrete
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18. ASTM C 1602 19. ASTM D 448 20. ASTM D 1557 21. ASTM D 1751
Specification for Mixing Water Used in the Production of Hydraulic Cement Concrete Classification for Sizes of Aggregate for Road and Bridge Construction Test Methods for Laboratory Compaction Characteristics of Soil Using Modified Effort (56,000 ft-lb/ft3) Specification for Preformed Expansion Joint Filler for Concrete Paving and Structural Construction (Nonextruding and Resilient Bituminous Types) Specification for Preformed Sponge Rubber Cork and Recycled PVC Expansion Joint Fillers for Concrete Paving and Structural Construction Test Method for Permeability of Granular Soils (Constant Head) Test Method for Infiltration Rate of Soils in Field Using Double-Ring Infiltrometer Test Method for Field Measurement of Infiltration Rate Using a Double-Ring Infiltrometer with a Sealed-Inner Ring Test Methods for Measurement of Hydraulic Conductivity of Saturated Porous Materials Using a Flexible Wall Permeameter (Falling Head, Method C) Standard Test Method for Pore Size Characteristics of Geotextiles by Capillary Flow Test Specification for Agencies Engaged in the Testing and/or Inspection of Materials Used in Construction
1.02
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1.03
Special Equipment
Pervious concrete requires specific equipment for compaction and jointing. The concrete shall be jointed and compacted using the methods listed, or alternatives, as demonstrated and approved by the Architect/Engineer. Rolling compaction shall be achieved using a motorized or hydraulically actuated, rotating, weighted, tube screed that spans the width of the section placed and exerts a minimum vertical pressure of 10 psi (69 kPa) on the concrete. See Figure 1. Alternately, a steel pipe roller meeting the same criteria may be used.
Figure 1. Roller Screeding Fresh Pervious Concrete Plate compaction is not recommended, but may be necessary in small areas. When necessary, a standard soil plate compactor with a base area of at least two square feet (0.20 m2) that exerts a minimum of 10 psi (69 kPa) vertical pressure on the pavement surface through a 3/4 in. (19 mm) minimum temporary plywood cover shall be used. Cross rolling shall be performed using a roller specifically designed to smooth and compact pervious concrete. Figure 2 shows an appropriate roller for pervious concrete pavement. Lawn rollers are not allowed.
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Figure 2. Cross Rolling Pervious Concrete Contraction joints shall be constructed by rolling or forming, if the owner desires joints. The sawing of joints is discouraged due to the sediment introduced into the pavement and the increased probability of raveling along the joints. Rolled joints shall be formed using a pizza cutter roller to which a beveled fin with a minimum depth of the thickness of the pavement has been attached around the circumference of the roller. See Figure 3.
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1.04
Submittals
Prior to commencement of the work the contractor shall submit the following: A. Concrete Materials: 1. Proposed concrete mixture proportions including all material weights, volumes, density (unit weight), water-to-cement (cementitious) ratio, and void content. 2. Aggregate type, source, and grading 3. Cement, supplementary cementitious materials, and chemical admixture manufacturer certifications B. Aggregate base materials: washed aggregate type, source, grading, and void content (percent porosity). C. Qualifications per Quality Assurance section 1.03. D. Project details including a jointing plan, construction details, schedule, construction procedures, and quality control plan. E. List of all subcontractors, materials suppliers, and testing laboratories to be used on the project.
1.05
Test Panels
Test panels shall be placed a minimum of 30 days prior to construction, and must be approved by the Architect/Engineer. The Architect/Engineer may waive this requirement based on Contractor qualifications. A. Test panels shall be constructed in accordance with the plans and specifications and shall be placed a minimum 30 days prior to construction. Regardless of qualification, the contractor is to place two test panels, each a minimum of 225 ft2 (20 m2) at the required project thickness. Test panels shall be consolidated, jointed and cured using materials, equipment, and personnel proposed for the project, to demonstrate to the Architect/Engineers satisfaction that in-place densities can be achieved and a satisfactory pavement can be installed at the site location. In addition, the proposed ready-mix supplier must be used during the construction of the test panels to ensure proper delivery of a satisfactory pervious concrete mixture. B. Test panels cost and removal, if necessary, shall be included as a line item in the contract proposal and contract. Test panels may be placed at any of the specified pervious concrete pavement locations on the project site or other test site. C. Quality: Test panels shall have acceptable surface finish, joint details, thickness, porosity and curing procedures and shall comply with the testing and acceptance standards listed in the Quality Control section of this specification. Test panels shall be tested for thickness in accordance with ASTM C 42; void content in accordance with ASTM C 138, Gravimetric Air Determination; fresh density in accordance with ASTM C 29, Section 11, Jigging Procedure; core density in accordance with ASTM C 140, paragraph 9; and compressive strength in accordance with ASTM C 39. D. Satisfactory performance of the test panels shall be determined by: 1. Compacted thickness of no less than specified thickness minus inch (6.4 mm) (Tcompacted Tspecified in.) (Tcompacted Tspecified 6.4 mm) 2. Void Structure: 15% minimum; 25% maximum; 3. Density 5 lb/ft3 (80 kg/m3) of the design weight. 4. Compressive strength equal to or greater than design strength.
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E. If test panels are found to be unsatisfactory, they shall be removed at the Contractors expense and disposed of in an approved landfill or recycling facility. If test panels are found to be satisfactory, they may be left in-place and included in the completed work, at no additional cost to the project.
1.06
Project Conditions
A. Weather Restrictions 1. The Contractor shall not place pervious concrete pavement when the ambient temperature is predicted by the National Weather Service Point Forecast for the jobsite to be 40F (4.4C) or lower during the seven days following placement, unless otherwise permitted in writing by the Architect/Engineer. 2. The Contractor shall not place pervious concrete pavement later in the year than November 1 or earlier in the year than April 1 unless otherwise permitted in writing by the Architect/Engineer. 3. The Contractor shall not place pervious concrete pavement when the ambient temperature is predicted by the National Weather Service Point Forecast for the jobsite to rise above 90F (32.2C) during the seven days following placement, unless otherwise permitted in writing by the Architect/Engineer. 4. Pervious concrete pavement shall not be placed on frozen subgrade. 5. Fogging shall be applied from the time of discharge until pervious concrete is covered with plastic due to the high rates of evaporation typical in Colorado. B. Pre-Paving Conference 1. A pre-paving conference with the Architect/Engineer shall be held within one week prior to beginning placement. The pervious concrete supplier and the entire concrete crew that will form and place the concrete shall attend this meeting. 2. The document Checklist for the Concrete Pre-Construction Conference (available from the CRMCA, NRMCA, or the American Society of Concrete Contractors) shall be used to review all requirements of the contract during the meeting. Meeting emphasis shall include how paving with pervious concrete differs from paving with conventional concrete. 3. A pre-construction conference shall be held and/or notice shall be provided to all subcontractors identifying the special precautions that are required when constructing pervious concrete pavement.
Part 2 2.01
2.02
Curing Materials
A. Polyethylene sheeting - The primary method of curing pervious concrete shall be the placement of a ballasted waterproof covering consisting of a minimum of 6 mil thick polyethylene sheeting.
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B. Other moisture loss control - For prevention of moisture loss prior to the primary method of curing: 1. Fogging equipment designed to raise the relative humidity of the ambient air over the slab and reduce evaporation from the concrete must be used. Use of such equipment is required in certain weather conditions; see section 1.07 A. 5. Equipment must include fog nozzles that atomize water using air pressure to create a fog blanket over the slab. See Figure 4. Garden hose nozzles are not sufficient to create fog and may wash paste off the aggregate.
Figure 4. Fogging Nozzle 2. Water sufficient to partially flood the aggregate base course may be used to increase humidity below the 6 mil polyethylene curing sheet. 3. Liquid membrane curing compounds may be used. While curing compounds may temporarily reduce initial porosity, they generally do not adversely affect the pavements performance. Curing compounds must comply with ASTM C-309, Type 1, Class A when applied at a rate of 200 ft2 (19 m2) per gallon, unless otherwise approved by the Architect/Engineer. 4. Monomolecular film (Evaporation Retardant) applied per the manufacturers instructions. 5. A soybean oil based sealer/water repellant may reduce surface color markings from plastic sheeting, and can enhance strength and durability by preventing evaporation, but does not reduce porosity.
2.03
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B. Supplementary Cementitious Materials: 1. Fly ash conforming to ASTM C 618. C. Admixtures: 1. Air entraining admixtures meeting ASTM C 260. 2. Chemical admixtures shall comply with ASTM C 494. a. Water reducing admixtures: Type A. mid-range water reducing admixtures (MRWRA) or high range water reducing admixtures (HRWRA) Type F or G are permitted due to low water-to-cement (cementitious) ratios specified for pervious concrete. b. Hydration stabilizing admixtures meeting requirements of ASTM C 494 Type B Retarding or Type D Water Reducing/Retarding admixtures are required. This stabilizer suspends cement hydration by forming a protective barrier around the cementitious particles, delaying the initial set as the pervious concrete heats up in the truck. A standard retarder will not prevent premature hydration while the stabilizer will. The use of hot water during cold weather will require an increased dosage of Hydration Stabilizer. D. Aggregates: 1. Coarse Aggregate shall meet the grading and quality requirement of ASTM C 33, based on meeting the project requirements. [Data for proposed alternate material shall be submitted for approval per Section l.05A of this guide.] 2. Fine aggregate complying with ASTM C 33 shall provide 6 % 2 % of total aggregate weight. 3. A combined coarse and fine aggregates gradation shall be provided and a minimum of 10% of the material shall pass the #4 sieve. (Research suggests that the inclusion of additional sand increases the freeze thaw resistance, durability, and strength while still allowing adequate porosity.) 4. Larger aggregate sizes may increase porosity but can decrease workability and strength. Well graded aggregates shall be avoided as they may reduce porosity and may not provide adequate void content. 5. Natural rounded aggregates, where available, are recommended. E. Water shall be potable and comply with ASTM C 1602. F. Fiber reinforcement, if used, shall comply with ASTM C 1116. G. Recommended Mixture Proportions: The Contractor shall furnish a proposed mixture design, with proportions of materials, or if mixture proportions are proprietary, a written submittal from the concrete supplier, prior to commencement of work. The data shall include densities determined in accordance with ASTM C 29 section 11, Jigging Procedure. The composition of the proposed concrete mixture shall be submitted to the Architect/Engineer for review and/or approval and shall comply with the following provisions unless an alternative composition is demonstrated to comply with the project requirements. Mixture performance will be affected by the properties of the particular materials used. Trial mixtures must be tested to establish proper proportions and determine expected behavior. Concrete producers may have mixture proportions for pervious concrete optimized for performance with local materials. Appendix 6 of ACI 21 l.3R provides a guide for pervious concrete mixture proportioning. General mixture recommendations are as follows: Specifiers Guide for Pervious Concrete Pavement Design Version 1.2 Page 11
1. Concrete mixture density: range of 105 lb/ft3 to 130 lb/ft3 (1682 kg/m3 to 2082 kg/m3) per ASTM C 29, section 11, Jigging Procedure. 2. Concrete mixture void content: range of 15% to 25%, per ASTM C 138, Gravimetric Air Determination. 3. Cementitious content: range of 450 lbs/yd3 to 550 lb/yd3 (267kg/m3 to 326kg/m3) 4. Supplementary cementitious content: Fly ash: 20% maximum; combined supplementary cementitious content: 20% maximum. 5. Water-to-cement (cementitious) ratio: range from 0.26 to 0.35. 6. Aggregate content: The bulk volume of aggregate per cubic yard (cubic meter) shall be equal to 27ft3 (1000L) when calculated from the density (unit weight) determined in accordance with ASTM C 29 Jigging Procedure. 7. Admixtures: Admixtures shall be used in accordance with the manufacturers instructions and recommendations. 8. Mixture Water: The quantity of mixing water shall be established to produce a pervious concrete mixture of the desirable workability to facilitate placement, compaction, and finishing to the desired surface characteristics. Mixture water shall be such that the cement paste displays a wet metallic sheen without causing the paste to flow from the aggregate. (A cement paste with a dull-dry appearance has insufficient mixture water for hydration.) Insufficient mix water results in inconsistency in the mix and poor bond strength. High water content may result in the paste sealing the void system primarily at the bottom and poor bond at the upper surface. 9. Air Entrainment: has been shown to increase freeze thaw durability of pervious concrete. 10. Fiber Reinforcement: may help prevent raveling but may decrease workability.
Part 3 3.01
Execution Notification
The Architect/Engineer shall be notified at least 24 hours prior to all pervious concrete paving work.
3.02
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C. Formwork materials are permitted to be of wood or steel and shall be the full depth of the pavement. Caution should be used to protect the filter fabric and impermeable membranes from puncture or tear when placing forms and form pins. Forms shall be of sufficient strength and stability to support mechanical equipment without deformation of plan profiles following spreading, strike-off and compaction operations. Forms may have a removable spacer of in. to in. (13 mm to 19 mm) thickness placed above the depth of pavement. The spacers shall be removed following placement and vibratory strike-off to allow roller compaction. (Removable spacers may not be necessary if other means of strike-off and consolidation are used, such as a motorized or hydraulically actuated weighted pipe roller screed.) D. Mixing and Transportation: 1. Production: Pervious concrete shall be manufactured and delivered in accordance with ASTM C 94. 2. Mixing: Pervious concrete shall be batched in central mixers or in transit (truck) mixers. (When concrete is delivered in agitating or non-agitating units. the concrete shall be mixed in the central mixer for a minimum of 1 minute or until a homogenous mixture is achieved. Concrete mixed in transit mixers shall be mixed at the mixing speed designated by the manufacturer for 70 - 100 revolutions. 3. Transportation: Pervious concrete may be transported or mixed on site and discharge of individual loads shall be completed within one (1) hour of the introduction of mixture water to the cement. Discharge times may be extended beyond one hour when an increased dosage of hydration stabilizer is used to maintain a wet metallic sheen. 4. Discharge: Each truckload shall be visually inspected for moisture consistency. Water addition shall be permitted at the point of discharge to obtain the required mixture consistency, and as needed to maintain a wet metallic sheen. A minimum of 30 revolutions at the manufacturers designated mixing speed shall be required following the addition of any water to the mixture, prior to further discharge. If water is added more than three times to a load, the dosage rate of hydration stabilizing admixture should be increased in subsequent loads. Discharge shall he a continuous operation and shall be completed as quickly as possible. Concrete shall be deposited as close to its final position as practical and such that discharged concrete is incorporated into previously placed plastic concrete. If consolidation occurs during concrete discharge, placement shall be halted, the mixture shall be addressed, and the consolidated portion removed and replaced immediately. E. Placing and Finishing: 1. The base shall be in a damp or semi-flooded condition at time of placement. Failure to provide a moist base will result in an absorption of water from the pervious concrete into the base, consequently reducing the concrete strength and overall quality of the pavement 2. Concrete may be deposited into the forms by mixer truck chute, conveyor or buggy. 3. Placing, finishing, and tooled jointing must be completed within 20 minutes from the time the pervious concrete is discharged from the truck. 4. Unless otherwise permitted, the Contractor shall utilize a mechanical vibratory screed to strike off the concrete in. to in. (13 mm to 19 mm) above final elevation, utilizing the form spacers described in section 3.02 C. Formwork. An alternative method of strike off and compaction is Specifiers Guide for Pervious Concrete Pavement Design Version 1.2 Page 13
to use a motorized or hydraulically actuated weighted pipe roller screed, as described in section 1.04 A., Special Equipment. If approved by the Architect/Engineer in writing, the Contractor may place the pervious concrete with either slip form or vibratory form riding equipment followed by a compacting unit that will provide a minimum of 10 psi (69 kPa) vertical force to the concrete. Similarly, strike off by hand straightedge followed by compaction may be permitted for sidewalks and other small areas. 5. Care must be taken to prevent closing the void structure of pervious concrete. Finishing operations not described in this guide are not allowed. Internal vibration shall not be permitted. (If surface vibration is applied, it shall be shut off immediately when forward progress is halted for any reason.) 6. Placed concrete shall not be disturbed while in the plastic state including edging. Low spots after the screeding operation shall be over-filled for surface repair and tamped to the desired elevation with hand tampers or re-screeded with the motorized or hydraulically actuated weighted pipe roller screed. 7. Following strike-off, remove spacers and compact the concrete to the form level utilizing a steel roller, a plate compactor on plywood or other method approved by the Architect/Engineer. 8. Freshly compacted concrete shall be protected from evaporation using one or more methods described in section 3.02 G 2. 9. Cross rolling should be performed using the minimum number of passes required to achieve an acceptable surface. Over working the concrete surface will close voids and limit porosity. 10. Care shall be taken during compaction that sufficient compaction force is achieved without excessively working the concrete surface that might result in sealing surface porosity. 11. The pervious concrete pavement shall be compacted to the required crosssection and shall not deviate more than 1 inches (35mm) in 10 feet (3.0 m) from profile grade. F. Jointing: 1. Joints in pervious pavements may be omitted at the option of the owner, who may instead choose to accept or prefer the appearance of random cracking. 2. Although longer joint spacing may control cracking, for conservative design, contraction joints shall be installed at regular intervals not to exceed 20 ft (6.1 m). Slab length shall not exceed 1.5 times slab width. Transverse contraction joints shall be installed at the depth of the thickness of the pavement. These joints are to be installed as quickly as possible in the plastic concrete. 3. Jointing plastic concrete: Joints installed in the plastic concrete may be constructed utilizing a small roller as described in the Special Equipment section of this guide specification. When this option is used it shall be performed immediately after roller compaction and prior to curing. If the Engineer allows sawed joints in writing, they shall be constructed using an early entry or wet saw. Note: Sawed joints may exhibit additional raveling, and any dust or slurry generated shall be removed during the sawing operation. Specifiers Guide for Pervious Concrete Pavement Design Version 1.2 Page 14
4. Transverse construction joints: Transverse construction joints shall be installed whenever placement is suspended for 30 minutes or whenever concrete is no longer workable. 5. Isolation joints: Isolate slabs from other parts of the structure, such as walls, footings, columns, garage slabs, stairs, light poles, and other points of restraint. Isolation joints permit independent vertical and horizontal movement between adjoining parts of the structure and help minimize cracking. 6. Edging shall be performed along isolation joints and construction joints in order to reduce potential for raveling under traffic. G. Curing: 1. Curing procedures shall begin immediately but no later than 20 minutes from the time the pervious concrete is discharged from the truck. Placing, finishing, and tooled jointing must be completed within the 20-minute window after discharge. The pavement surface shall be covered with a minimum of 6 mil thick polyethylene sheet or other approved covering material. The cover shall overlap and be sealed at all edges and shall be secured (without using dirt or stone) to prevent uncovering due to winds or adjacent traffic conditions. For additional guidance on hot weather concreting, see ACI 305; for cold weather concreting see ACI 306. 2. Due to the low water-to-cement (cementitious) ratio and large areas of exposed surface, pervious concrete is especially susceptible to drying out. The surface shall be kept moist and evaporation prevented using some or all of the following methods: a. Fogging should start when the pervious concrete is deposited and should be continued until the plastic curing cover is placed. Fogging is always a good practice due to Colorados arid climate and is required under certain weather conditions described in section 1.07 A. 5. b. Application of spray applied curing compound, evaporation retarder, monomolecular film, or covering with .5 mil plastic sheet immediately after screeding. Note that .5 mil plastic sheet used to prevent evaporation is not a substitute for the 6 mil polyethylene sheet used for curing. c. Application of water under the plastic covering. If this method is implemented by loosening the edge of the plastic in order to spray water under the plastic cover, care must be taken to properly resecure the plastic cover to prevent evaporation. 3. Immediately after each transverse jointing, the 6 mil polyethylene sheet curing shall be applied. 4. The curing cover shall remain securely in place, uninterrupted, until the concrete has reached a maturity equivalent to 14 days of curing at 70F (21C) at 95% relative humidity. Maturity shall be determined by an independent testing laboratory. No vehicular traffic shall be permitted on the pavement until curing is complete without written permission from the Architect/Engineer. 5. The owner and general contractor are responsible to notify the contractor if the polyethylene sheeting has been removed from the finished surface prior to completion of curing, and to re-cover the material immediately until the contractor can re-install covering.
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Program by Malcolm, Leming and Nunez, of the Civil Engineering Department. North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. The software is available from the Colorado Ready Mixed Concrete Association, the National Ready Mixed Concrete Association or the Portland Cement Association. Specifiers Guide for Pervious Concrete Pavement Design Version 1.2 Page 16
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Program by Malcolm, Leming and Nunez, Civil Engineering Department, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina. The software is available from the Colorado Ready Mixed Concrete Association, the National Ready Mixed Concrete Association, and the Portland Cement Association. Specifiers Guide for Pervious Concrete Pavement Design Version 1.2 Page 18
detention layers during site development. As the site is fully stabilized, excess filter fabric along the detention layer edges can be cut back to coarse aggregate edge. B. Groundwater Recharge Bed 1. Subgrade Preparation (a flat subgrade is preferred for a recharge bed) (1) Existing subgrade under recharge bed areas shall NOT be compacted or subject to excessive construction equipment traffic prior to coarse aggregate bed placement. (2) Where erosion of subgrade has caused accumulation of fine materials and/or surface ponding, this material shall be removed with light equipment and the underlying soils scarified to a minimum depth of 6 in. (15 cm) with a rake or equivalent and light tractor. (3) Bring subgrade of coarse aggregate recharge bed to line, grade, and elevations required. (4) Fill and lightly regrade any areas damaged by erosion, ponding, or traffic compaction before the placing of coarse aggregate. 2. Recharge Bed Installation (1) Upon completion of subgrade preparation, the Architect/Engineer shall be notified and shall inspect at his discretion before the contractor may proceed with recharge bed installation. (2) Filter fabric, with pipe or any other storage devices, and recharge bed aggregate shall be placed immediately after approval of subgrade preparation. Any accumulation of debris or sediment which has taken place after approval of subgrade shall be removed prior to installation of filter fabric at the contractors expense. (3) Place filter fabric in accordance with manufacturers standards and recommendations. Adjacent strips of filter fabric shall overlap a minimum of 16 in. (40 cm) The contractor shall secure fabric at least 2 ft (0.6 m) outside of bed and take steps necessary to prevent any runoff or sediment from entering the storage bed. For protection of existing adjacent building foundations, the contractor shall place impervious liner over filter fabric extending 6 ft. (1.8 m) beyond toe of slope face at building face. and secure as recommended by manufacturer. Install coarse aggregate in 6 in. (15 cm) maximum lifts. Lightly compact each layer with roller, keeping equipment movement over storage bed subgrades to a minimum. Install aggregate to grades required on the drawings. (4) A choker base course may be installed to allow more consistent thickness and placement of pavement. The Architect/Engineer shall be notified for approval. (5) Following placement of bed aggregate, the filter fabric shall be folded back along all bed edges to protect from sediment washout along bed edges. At least a 2 ft (0.6 m) strip shall be used to protect beds from adjacent bare soil. This edge strip shall remain in place until all bare soils adjacent to beds are stabilized and vegetated. In addition, hay bales (if allowed) shall be placed at the toe of slopes which may be adjacent to beds to further prevent sediment from washing into beds during site development. As the site is fully stabilized, excess filter fabric along the bed edges can be cut back to coarse aggregate edge.
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Related Publications
Urban Storm Drainage Criteria Manual (Volume 1) Urban Drainage and Flood Control District; Denver, CO Urban Storm Drainage Criteria Manual (Volume 2) Urban Drainage and Flood Control District; Denver, CO Urban Storm Drainage Criteria Manual (Volume 3) Urban Drainage and Flood Control District; Denver, CO Recommended Specifications for Portland Cement Pervious Pavement The Carolinas Ready Mixed Concrete Association, Inc. Guide for Construction of Portland Cement Concrete Pervious Pavement Georgia Concrete and Products Association Design of Pervious Concrete Mixtures Portland Cement Association SPECIFIERS GUIDE FOR PERVIOUS CONCRETE PAVEMENT DESIGN Michigan Concrete Association SPECIFIERS GUIDE FOR PERVIOUS CONCRETE PAVEMENT WITH DETENTION Ohio Ready Mixed Concrete Association Pervious Concrete The California Experience California Nevada Cement Promotion Council Sustainable Design of Pervious Concrete Pavements. Angela Hager. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Colorado Denver. (UMI No. 3360870).
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Disclaimer
This specifiers guide is intended solely for use by professional personnel who are competent to evaluate the significance and limitations of the information provided and who will accept responsibility for the application of this information. The Colorado Ready Mixed Concrete Association (CRMCA) disclaims all responsibility and liability for the accuracy and application of the information contained in this publication to the full extent permitted by law. There are many material facts concerning pervious concrete pavement with detention that are not fully analyzed in this guide. While this guide contains information that CRMCA considers to be reliable, CRMCA does not guaranty that it is accurate or complete. The opinions expressed in this guide reflect the judgment of CRMCA at this date and are subject to change.
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