Work Set to Begin to Repair Guidewall at Locks and Dam 15

Published Sept. 6, 2018
A large section of the lower guidewall at Locks and Dam 15 was removed in May 2017 after engineers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District noticed portions of the wall had moved significantly. At the time, it was determined that four monoliths making up a portion of the guidewall needed to be demolished as the failing concrete created risk to the navigation system.

A large section of the lower guidewall at Locks and Dam 15 was removed in May 2017 after engineers from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Rock Island District noticed portions of the wall had moved significantly. At the time, it was determined that four monoliths making up a portion of the guidewall needed to be demolished as the failing concrete created risk to the navigation system.

ROCK ISLAND, Illinois – The Rock Island District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has mobilized construction crews as part of a contract to repair the lower guidewall at Locks and Dam 15 located adjacent to the Rock Island Arsenal and Government Bridge swing span.

 The contractor, Civil Constructors of East Moline, Illinois, which will carry out the $11.2 million contract, has begun preliminary work to build an access road to enable crews to reach the site of the damaged guidewall which is at the far, downstream end of the lock project. Once the access road is complete, the contractor will begin work on drilling shafts for the new guidewall. Once the winter closure starts, the contractor will continue drilling shafts as well as removing six of the 12 monoliths from the guidewall. 

“The contractor will do a majority of the work during two winter closures of the lock, one in 2018 and one in 2019,” said Mark Pratt, Construction Area Engineer for the Rock Island District. “Each winter closure will include demolishing six monoliths, installing drilled shafts and then placing concrete to rebuild the monoliths.” 

A majority of the work has been scheduled for the winter months in order to lessen the impact to navigation caused by lock closures. The construction should be complete by the end of 2019. 

A large section of the lock’s guidewall had to be removed in May 2017 after Rock Island District engineers noticed portions of the wall had moved significantly. At the time, it was determined four monoliths making up a portion of the guidewall needed to be demolished as the failing concrete created risk to the navigation system. 

The lower guidewall, like almost of all of the lock’s concrete, is original to the lock project. Locks and Dam 15 was the first lock completed on the Upper Mississippi River as part of the 9-foot navigation system. Construction at Locks and Dam 15 finished in 1934.


Contact
Allen Marshall
(309) 794-5204

Release no. 18-055