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Prospect
Lake is located in Memorial Park in south-central
Colorado Springs, Colorado. The high profile, 52-acre
recreational lake has continually experienced seepage
losses throughout its 100-year history. The treated
water used to fill the lake quickly drained away when
Colorado Springs Parks and Recreation (CSPR) stopped
filling it to conserve water in response to several
years of drought.
CSPR
retained Kumar & Associates (K+A) to explore alternative
liners for reducing seepage losses. Analyses indicated
that a geomembrane liner system was preferable to a
compacted clay liner. K+A recommended lining the lake
with a 30-mil PVC liner overlain by an 8-ounce
geotextile separator fabric and 1 to 2 feet of
protective soil cover.
K+A was
the principal designer responsible for the liner system
and teamed with the civil engineering firm Associated
Design Professionals (ADP) of Colorado Springs to
complete the project. The lake is impounded by two
jurisd ictional
dams, so proposed modifications to the dams and
reservoir required the approval of the State Engineer’s
Office (SEO). K+A and ADP worked closely with the SEO
to reduce a review process that can frequently take up
to several months and was able to prepare final designs,
obtain SEO approval, and get the project out to bid in
just over two months.
The project was constructed from early
April to mid-July 2005. Besides spring weather
concerns, the greatest challenge was stabilizing the 2-
to 4-foot thick highly plastic clay in the middle of the
lake for the support of the liner and the equipment used
to install it. Step one was to quickly drain the lake
to allow the clay time to dry out before the summer
monsoon rains. Although large inflows in the flowing
sands underlying the clay were initially encountered,
the lake was successfully dewatered using trenches and a
central sump.
Approximately 6 ½ acres of the soft subgrade was
successfully stabilized using biaxial geogrid placed
directly on the clayey subgrade, and overlai n
by 12 to 18 inches of on-site material. Approximately
224 tons of liner material, 8 miles of field seams, and
72 tons of geotextile separator fabric were placed. The
project was completed slightly over the contractor’s bid
price, but below the engineer’s anticipated cost given
the significant unknowns regarding weather and subgrade
stabilization. The project was completed on-schedule to
allow for lake filling by early September and the annual
Balloon Day Festival at Prospect Lake.
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