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| Channel Improvement and Stabilization Program |
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Concrete Mats
Revetment construction with concrete mats on the Mississippi River is unique.
The process starts with the smoothing of the bank to a stable slope from the top to well beneath
the water surface. Then the concrete mats are placed in the water along the base of the river.
Before the development of the concrete mats the revetments were constructed using wood, typically hand
woven willow planks.
Revetment construction in the past was done with wood. |
Before placing the revetment, large floating draglines smooth the bank to a stable slope from the top to well beneath the water surface. |
The St. Francisville Casting Field located 30 miles north of Baton Rouge.
An average of 120,000 "squares" of concrete mattresses are cast here every year. |
Each "square" of concrete mat measures four feet in width
by 25 feet in length by three inches thick. The individual mats are woven together with steel
wire into flexible 140-foot-wide sections. Each square of woven mats contains almost one cubic
yard of concrete. |
Once the assembly of the mattress is completed, the launching barge moves out into the
the river along the mooring barge, allowing the mattress to slide over the edge.
When the mattress covers the desired area, the cables are cut and the barges are moved
to lay the next mattress. |
The concrete mats are assembled on the sloping deck of the launching
barge into a mattress connected to launching cables which are anchored to the
bank.. |
Contact
Don Rawson, CEMVN-ED-LC
504-862-2952
Donald.E.Rawson@mvn02.usace.army.mil
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