In the UK, the High Speed 1 project formally pioneered on a large scale the earthworks design philosophy of maximising reuse of excavated materials and minimising waste. Now, in 2011, it is considered best practice for sustainable earthworks on all major infrastructure projects. This philosophy was a requirement of the Channel Tunnel Rail Link Act 1996, and a waste minimisation hierarchy was therefore included within construction specifications. This paper presents two different solutions found on one contract to enable two difficult silty soils, which would historically have gone to mitigation or taken off site, to be successfully retained and used as engineered fill. The first soil was quarry overburden material of Thanet Sand with considerably varying optimum moisture contents. A ‘family of curves' approach was developed to enable rapid single-point compaction testing to predict optimum moisture contents. The second was an artificial soil called cement kiln dust, generated as a by-product of cement manufacture. This material had a high silt proportion, and very high natural and optimum moisture contents, and was in a condition much wetter than optimum. A strength-based end-product acceptance criterion was developed using a CBR MEXE probe.
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April 2011
Research Article|
April 01 2011
High Speed 1, UK: a silty sustainable earthworks case study
Chris Barker, MSc, DIC, CEng, MICE, MIEAust;
Chris Barker, MSc, DIC, CEng, MICE, MIEAust
Associate
Ove Arup & Partners, London, UK
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Alan Phear, MSc, DIC, CEng, MICE
Alan Phear, MSc, DIC, CEng, MICE
Associate Director
Ove Arup & Partners, Solihull, UK
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Publisher: Emerald Publishing
Revision Received:
March 31 2010
Accepted:
October 27 2010
Online ISSN: 1751-8563
Print ISSN: 1353-2618
ICE Publishing: All rights reserved
2011
Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Geotechnical Engineering (2011) 164 (2): 101–111.
Article history
Revision Received:
March 31 2010
Accepted:
October 27 2010
Citation
Barker C, Phear A (2011), "High Speed 1, UK: a silty sustainable earthworks case study". Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers - Geotechnical Engineering, Vol. 164 No. 2 pp. 101–111, doi: https://doi.org/10.1680/geng.2011.164.2.101
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