Rehabilitation of lining of 11.3 km long sections of headrace channel, Alz channel, Bavaria

Tuesday, September 05, 2017 by Walo UK Limited

The Background

The Alz channel is a manmade 18 km long headrace channel, which provides water for power production and cooling purposes for Wacker Chemie AG, a chemical factory employing 10,000 people. The channel is located in Bavaria, Germany, 40 km north of the city of Salzburg.


The channel was built early in the 20th century and was lined with concrete slabs, installed between 1920 and 1922. Extensive rehabilitation of the surface of the channel was required to ensure the channel was to remain watertight and maintain maximum efficiency for the chemical plant it serves.


WALO was commissioned to re-line the major length of the channel with a 60mm thick Asphaltic Base Layer (ABL) and another 60 mm layer of Dense Asphaltic Concrete. The total area to be relined consisted of 142,300m2 on the slopes, 16,700m2 on the base and also an area of 46,700m2 (in the water exchange zone on the upper part of the slopes) needed a mastic sealing layer installed to provide optimum protection against UV radiation.

The Challenge

This was a turnkey project for WALO, who had total responsibility for all the details of the design and the engineering solution as a lump sum contract. WALO faced a number of challenges - as well as the channel being very long, its sides have an incline of 39°, meaning the lining teams were working on fairly steep and narrow slopes throughout. WALO's new channel paving machine has been perfectly designed for carrying out exactly this kind of work. In addition to the new 'channel paver', several new machines were manufactured and adapted for this challenging project.


The time available was also strictly limited, with the channel only remaining empty for eight weeks. In order to complete the work as quickly as possible, four to five of WALO's specialist lining teams were working simultaneously, with one working on the horizontal placing while three to four others worked on the vertical placing. Prior to the lining works, the existing concrete surface was roughened and cleaned by high water pressure. To ensure the process was carried out efficiently and safely, it meant careful co-ordination of heavy machinery and the labour force, working in very close proximity to each other in a comparatively confined space. Despite these challenges, the entire project was carried out to schedule in three months and impounding started earlier than scheduled.

 



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