GEOSYNTHETICS IN REINFORCED SOIL SYSTEMS: 41
Embankments over Soft Foundations, Reinforced Steepened Slopes, Mechanically Stabilized Earth Walls
For more information please contact the Geosynthetic Materials Association at www.gmanow.com.
OVERVIEW
Though the use of tensile inclusions in soil
structures dates back
several thousand years to
the construction of religious structures in
ancient Babylonia, it was only three decades ago
that Henri Vidal, a French architect, pioneered
modern earth reinforcement techniques. These
techniques involved the incorporation of tensile
elements into a soil mass to complement the
soil's compressive strength and to improve the
mechanical properties of the soil mass.
Beginning in the early 1970's, experimentation
using geotextiles as soil reinforcement was
conducted in Europe and the United States. The
U.S. Forest Service constructed full-scale
wrapped-face walls using geotextiles in 1974
and 1975 and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
began using geosynthetics in reinforcement
applications in 1978. Under FHWA
sponsorship, highway departments in New
York, Colorado, and Oregon constructed
geotextile reinforced walls in the early 1980's.
These successes attracted other candidate forms
of plastic inclusions such as geogrids
manufactured of polyethylene and coated
polyester.
These and other reinforced soil systems have
become known as mechanically stabilized earth
(MSE) and their use has significantly increased.
The primary types of MSE systems which have
emerged include: mechanically stabilized earth
walls (MSEW); reinforced soil slopes (RSS);
reinforced embankments over soft foundations
(RESF). MSEW and RSS have become
especially important in highway construction as
their use reduces the required width of new
right-of-way and facilitates construction within
existing limited right-of-way. RESF are
recognized as a cost-effective alternative to
traditional techniques for constructing earthen
embankments over low strength foundations.
Geosynthetic reinforced soil systems include:
•
Engineered soil fill
•
Geosynthetic reinforcement
•
Facing or slope protection system
Engineered Soil Fill
Geosynthetic Reinforcement
Facing
Handbook of Geosynthetics 42
For more information please contact the Geosynthetic Materials Association at www.gmanow.com.
EMBANKMENT
OVER SOFT SOILS
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