Complex Geotechnical Engineering for a Levee Project
Abstract
The Louisville Metro Levee System reduces flood risk to the City of Louisville, Kentucky. The levee system was constructed by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers and is now operated and maintained by the local sponsor, the Louisville and Jefferson County Metropolitan Sewer District (MSD). The levee system has a total length of 26.1 miles, consisting of concrete floodwalls and an earthen levee with sixteen flood pump stations for flood protection.

MSD determined the need to upgrade the existing Paddy’s Run Flood Pump Station’s capacity to reduce the risk of interior flooding. Due to the age and complications associated with upgrading the existing pump station, a new flood pump station will be constructed within the existing levee prism and portions of the existing station will be selectively demolished. MSD initiated a Progressive Design-Build project for a new Paddy’s Run Flood Pump Station.

The project proposed a diaphragm wall construction to serve as the temporary support of excavation for the new flood pump station, permanent foundation for the new flood pump station, levee under seepage cutoff, and embankment stability. The lateral soil pressures on the diaphragm walls result from the staged construction sequence, including the effects of bracing to provide lateral support to each wall, and soil-structure interaction. To properly account for these effects, Plaxis 2D models were created for different sections of the structures. The lateral soil pressures for the diaphragm wall design were obtained from the output of these Plaxis models.

This paper and presentation summarizes the geotechnical aspects of the diaphragm wall design and how it was used to inform the structural design.
All Authors
Adam Hacker | HDR Enrique Farfan, Ph.D.,P.E. | HDR Tom Pace, Ph.D. | HDR Benjamin Giacometti | Nicholson Construction Company
Publication Date
10/06/2024
Summary
Availability:
On-Demand
Cost:
FREE
Credit Offered:
No Credit Offered
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