The pipe is made from an engineered grade of polypropylene resin. Photo courtesy of ADS |
Under a $4.5 million road widening project, Standard Construction Co. (Avondale, AZ) was awarded a contract to reconstruct the intersection that included dual left turn lanes, a third auxiliary through lane, right turn lanes, bike lanes, bus pullouts, the storm drain, water line, new traffic signals, streetlights and landscaping. Now a total of six lanes, the intersection was completed in January 2011 and utilized $2.3 million in federal stimulus funds provided by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
Burial depth for the project's stormwater drainage line was specified at 18 feet for the retention basin to a minimum of three feet at collection points. At some points the bottom of the pipe was 26 feet deep.
According to Steve Sutton, president of Standard, "The pipe had to perform in deep and shallow depths."
The project was originally specified to use rubber-gasketed reinforced concrete pipe (RCP). But to help control costs and meet the deep burial requirements, Standard proposed using a highly engineered corrugated pipe.
"Up until now, the city standards specified concrete pipe as the approved material. They didn't typically allow HDPE pipe," Sutton said. "In fact, the Chandler road project was originally designed with concrete pipe but there was an interest in finding out more about the corrugated pipe. We proposed it as a valued engineering product which saved them about 10 percent of the cost of the pipe portion of this project."