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Forty-year-old Texas Reinforced Earth dam gets artistic facelift

Case Studies, News | December 22, 2021 | By:

Photograph courtesy Steve Lewis

Woodhollow Dam in Austin, Texas, was built between April and December of 1979 to control flash flooding in an Austin, Texas, neighborhood. This first dam constructed of Reinforced Earth MSE Retaining Walls in the United States created a buzz in the community and even had a visit from the inventor of the retaining wall system, Henri Vidal. The dam proved its value early and is still in use more than 40 years later as a flood control measure, as well as a new artistic landmark.

A 1978 artist rendering included in Reinforced Earth Co.’s wall plans. Illustration courtesy Reinforced Earth Co.

Neighboring apartment buildings and an adjacent roadway created a tight space, preventing the use of a conventional sloped earth dam. Having been introduced in the U.S. only eight years earlier by Vidal, the Reinforced Earth retaining wall system was still relatively unknown in civil engineering markets such as water resources and floodplain management. In addition to the smaller footprint, the cost efficiency compared to a cast-in-place concrete dam convinced the City of Austin Engineering Department to move forward with the Reinforced Earth Co.’s engineers in Arlington, Va., to finalize the design of the dam.

The dam was designed with a tiered wall facing on the downstream side. Initially the plan was for a straight vertical face, but with the proximity to the roadway, the City of Austin preferred the dam to be stepped back to appear smaller. Landscaping helped blend the tiered wall in with the site. The upstream side of the dam was built as a sloped-earth fill, extending 2.5 to 1 down from the back of the soil reinforcements. A clay core keyed into bedrock, a full-height crushed rock drainage blanket, riprap and other typical features of an earth dam are incorporated into the section of the structure.

Typical Section A. Illustration courtesy of Reinforced Earth Co.
Typical Section B: At spillway and concrete pipe outlet. Illustration courtesy of Reinforced Earth Co.

During construction in November 1979, a resident posed a question in the Austin American-Statesman newspaper:

What is the incredible structure going up across the creek on Woodhollow between Spicewood Springs Road and Greystone Drive?

lt is a dam. And it’s worth a trip just to see it. Somehow you don’t expect a dam right in the middle of a residential area but there it is. [The purpose of the dam is to] delay heavy water running into Shoal Creek during a rainstorm. . . . This is one of seven detention areas to detain stormwater runoff in that area. But this is the major one; it’s the only one like it in Austin or in the U.S.

Vic Williams, City Engineer

After completion of the dam’s construction, Vidal and his wife, Elizabeth, traveled from France to observe the structure, and they were guests at Austin’s City Council. From the City of Austin:

“Mr. Davidson, city manager, asked Mr. Charles Graves, director of engineering, to make an important presentation to [the] council on a unique project not only to Austin, but within the United States. He said we are proud to have been associated with it.

“Mr. Graves told council and members of the chamber audience that a new program of flood control had been launched a few years ago. One of the more interesting areas was the Shoal Creek Watershed. Henri Vidal, a French architect, engineer and inventor developed the concept for reinforced earth structures that has been used in the construction of Austin’s first major stormwater retention dam.”

Mayor Carole Mcclellan designated Dec. 13, 1979, Henri Vidal Day in Austin.

The mayor presented a key to the city to Mrs. Vidal. The Texas Society of Professional Engineers then presented a plaque to Mr. Vidal.

Elizabeth and Henri Vidal (center) on Dec. 13, 1979, at the Woodhollow Dam site with City of Austin representatives. Photograph courtesy Reinforced Earth Co.

Passing the test

Only a couple of years after its construction, on Memorial Day weekend 1981, the dam was tested by a 500-year flood.

When a tropical depression lingered over southwestern Texas and repeatedly deluged Austin with monsoon-like rains, Woodhollow Dam’s normally empty reservoir swelled to within six inches of the dam’s crest while the 45-foot wide concrete spillway passed flows estimated at 1,500 cubic feet per second, close to its maximum design capacity. The 33-foot dam showed its mettle by enduring the 500-year flash flood.

Water Works Digest, Jan. 1982

The deluge and severe flooding over Memorial Day weekend proved there’s more to the dam than just a pretty face.

Engineering News Record, June 18, 1981

A new look

In 2019 the dam’s “pretty face” was given quite an upgrade. Local artist, Bill Tavis, was commissioned by the city to paint a mural on the entire concrete face of the dam, an area of about 3,900 square feet (362 m2). Through TEMPO, part of Austin’s Art in Public Places program, the city is awarding local artists the opportunity to create temporary sculptures and murals on city property, paid for by the city. This particular mural took about four weeks to complete in fall 2019 and will eventually be replaced.

Bill Tavis applying spray paint to the face of the dam. Photograph courtesy Steve Lewis

Tavis said he found the wall’s facing panels very useful during the layout phase of his halftone mural. “They wound up being a big part of my process because I used the panels to grid out and transfer my image, it really helped!”

More about Tavis’ work on Woodhollow Dam can be found on his website.

Reinforced Earth says some photographs were provided by Bill TavisSteve Lewis and Philip Rogers.


Project details

Woodhollow Dam MSE wall

Location

Austin, Texas

Owner

City of Austin

Contractor

Austin Engineering Co.

Engineer

City of Austin Engineering Department


This article first appeared on the Reinforced Earth website, www.reinforcedearth.com.

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