Date: Fri 01-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 01-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
sewers-
Full Text:
with cut: Sewer Project Is Now About 75 Complete
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The town's continuing sanitary sewer construction project is more than 75
percent complete, according to John Whitten, senior field representative for
Fuss and O'Neill, Inc, the town's consulting engineer.
Work on the $34.3-million project is scheduled to conclude in about one year.
Workmen started sewer construction in November 1994 and, except for periods of
extreme weather during winter seasons, have continued digging the miles of
trenches for the sewage collector system, which traverses the Borough, Taunton
Pond North, and Sandy Hook Center.
Workmen have been installing a triple-box culvert at the end of Commerce Road.
When completed, the triple-box culvert, which will function as a bridge across
Tom Brook, will provide the main entryway to the sewage treatment plant. Since
construction began on the treatment plant site more than a year ago, workmen
and machines have had to travel a circuitous route across the Fairfield Hills
grounds to get to the construction site.
The Commerce Road entry to the sewage plant is expected to open within a
month, Mr Whitten said.
The existing turnaround at the end of Commerce Road will be narrowed to the
width of that road and a new turnaround will be built farther to the east.
After the sewer system is complete, the town will set a time period during
which residential and non-residential customers will be required to connect
their wastewater drains to the system. The length of time that sewer users
will have to connect to the system hasn't yet been set by the Water Pollution
Control Authority (WPCA).
The "out of pocket" costs that sewer users will bear to connect to the system
will vary depending on the complexity of their particular sewer hookup.
Relatively simple hookups involving short runs of drainpipe and easily
excavated soils may costs only $2,000 or $2,500, or so. Lengthy runs of drain
pipe with complex routing compounded by the presence of rock ledge near the
ground's surface will cost considerably more to install.
Sewer installers say that every building to which sewers are connected poses a
unique excavation situation.
After the new joint municipal-state sewage treatment plant is operating, the
sewage now treated by Fairfield Hills' existing treatment plant will be
diverted to the new plant. Sewage flows to the plant will then gradually
increase as an increasing number of municipal customers connect to the system.
Sewer line installation was underway this week along Main Street and Sugar
Street. Sugar Street was closed for six-hour periods each day from Monday to
Friday to allow workmen to extend lateral sewer lines toward residences there.
Also, workmen have been installing sewers via conventional open pit trenching
along the west side of Main Street from Edmond Town Hall northward to the
vicinity of Schoolhouse Hill Road. Work has proceeded rapidly there because
the trenching is relatively shallow at eight feet deep, there are no large
rocks to contend with in excavating the clay-based material, and construction
is taking place beneath a turfed area alongside the street, not beneath the
street, Mr Whitten said.
The the west side of Main Street between East Street and Glover Avenue will
have sewers installed via directional drilling. In directional drilling,
seamless lengths of sewer pipe are placed in bore holes drilled between large
pits. The advanced technique will be used to minimize damage to tree roots
along the street.
Weather permitting, in the coming weeks, a number of streets which had sewers
installed last year and earlier this year will receive their final coatings of
asphalt, Mr Whitten said. These include West Street, Baldwin Road, Juniper
Road, and the so-called Presidential streets.
Bids on four sewage pumping stations are expected to be let out in about one
month. The stations are needed to push sewage upward from low spots on the
periphery of the system to places where it can flow downward by the force of
gravity.
The largest run of sewer main yet to be installed in the sewer system will
extend from Diamond Drive, down Mt Pleasant Road to Main Street and then to
South Main Street to Mile Hill Road. That run of sewer pipe is more than
12,000 feet long.
When it's completed, the sewer system will include approximately 23 miles, or
about 121,000 feet of sewer mains and lateral sewer lines, Mr Whitten said.
That figure doesn't include the amount of sewer drainpipe which will extend
from buildings to the lateral lines.
