Long-Term Risk Assessment of Levee Cutoff Walls
Abstract
Hundreds of miles levees cutoffs have been placed in USACE levees in the Sacramento CA, Houston TX, and Southern Florida regions in the past 40 years, with smaller projects in additional regions. Many of these cutoff walls are designed for infrequent loading as they that are critical infrastructure for extreme flood events. With this infrequent loading, there are no widely accepted ways to monitor and quantify the condition and functionality of seepage cutoff walls for levees over multiple decades. The potential for deterioration is not well known. Lack of data on the longevity/design life of cutoff walls adds uncertainty to levee risk assessments, operational and maintenance costs, and community risk.

USACE-ERDC is conducting a comprehensive review of existing research regarding cutoff wall longevity and deterioration to address these uncertainties. The potential mechanisms of deterioration are cracking, chemical reactions, vegetation growth, or animal burrows. This paper includes documenting experiences from USACE levee safety experts, pertinent failure mechanisms identified from engineering literature, whether and how these considerations for cutoff walls are currently incorporated into risk assessments, and assessing the need for need for further research to reduce uncertainty.

The findings presented in this paper will include uncertainties and potential risks to levee performance due to levee cutoff wall deterioration and suggest areas for further field investigation. Findings could contribute to improving recommended potential post-construction QC practices, operations and maintenance practices, identifying early warnings of reduced functionality, reducing costly invasive/destructive testing, and informing risk assessment methodology.
All Authors
Katherine Winters, Ph.D. | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers John Murphy | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Spencer Waganaar | U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Publication Date
10/06/2024
Summary
Availability:
On-Demand
Cost:
FREE
Credit Offered:
No Credit Offered
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