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Gabion

Cage full of rock

Gabion

Summary

Cage full of rock

inclined]] stacked wall of gabions supporting a multilane roadway
Gabions as [[X-ray]] protection during [[customs]] inspection

A gabion (from Italian gabbione meaning "big cage"; from Italian gabbia and Latin cavea meaning "cage") is a cage, cylinder, or cube, typically mesh, filled with solid material suitable to use in various civil engineering and military applications. Ballasts include rocks, sand, soil, used tires, and other recycled items.

Among the most common civil engineering uses are erosion control, retaining walls, and impact attenuation; in the military gabions commonly protect forward operating bases and artillery firing positions against small arms and indirect fragmentary explosives. Applications include sleeping quarters, mess halls, checkpoints, and revetments for aircraft.

Design

Mattress gabions protecting a bank

The shape, proportion, and internal and external construction, reflect the use of each form of gabion.

Types:

  • Maccafierri: a box shaped gabion made out of galvanized steel, stainless steel, or PVC coated steel wire mesh.
  • Bastion: a gabion lined with an internal membrane, typically of nonwoven geotextile, to permit the use of granular soil fill instead of rock.
  • Mattress: a form of gabion designed to be laid flat singly rather than a stacked.
  • Trapion: a form of gabion with a trapezoidal cross-section, designed for stacking to give a sloped rather than stepped face.

Uses

Civil engineering

Gabions stepped with the slope as a bridge abutment

Leonardo da Vinci designed a type of gabion called a Corbeille Leonard ("Leonard[o] basket") for the foundations of the San Marco Castle in Milan.

A box-shaped wire mesh gabion for erosion control, the most common civil engineering application, was refined in the late 19th century in Italy and patented as the Maccaferri gabion. it was used to stabilize shorelines, stream banks and slopes. Other uses evolved, including retaining walls, noise barriers, temporary flood walls, silt filtration from runoff, small dams, fish screening, channel lining, and stepped weirs, which enhance the rate of energy dissipation in a channel.

The life expectancy of gabions depends on that of their wire. Galvanized steel wire is most common, but PVC-coated and stainless steel wire are also used. PVC-coated galvanized gabions have been estimated to last for 60 years. Some gabion manufacturers guarantee a structural integrity of 50 years.

In the United States, gabions were first used in stream erosion control projects beginning in 1957. More than 150 grade-control structures, bank revetments and channel deflectors were constructed on two U.S. Forest Service sites. Eventually, a large portion of the in-stream structures failed due to undermining and lack of structural integrity of the baskets. In particular, corrosion and abrasion of wires by movement of the streams’ bedload compromised the structures, which then sagged and collapsed into the channels. Other gabions were toppled into channels as trees grew atop their revetments, leveraging them toward the streams.

Gabions have also been used in building construction, as in the Dominus Winery in the Napa Valley, California, constructed between 1995 and 1997. The exterior is formed by modular wire mesh gabions containing locally quarried stone, allowing air movement through the building and moderating interior temperatures.

Military

Gabions protecting [[cannon]] in a late 16th-century illustration

Early gabions were round open-ended cages made from wickerwork filled with earth and used as military fortifications. In one example, willow twigs were brought from East Lothian to make gabions to protect gun emplacements during the April 1573 siege of Edinburgh Castle.

Such early military gabions were most often used to protect sappers and siege artillery gunners. The wickerwork cylinders were light and could be carried relatively conveniently in the ammunition train, particularly when made in nesting diameters. In use they would be stood on end, staked in position, and filled. During the Crimean War, local shortages of brushwood led to use of scrap hoop-iron from hay bales, inspiring purpose-built sheet-iron gabions.

Today, gabions are used to protect forward operating bases (FOBs) against small arms and explosive, fragmentary, indirect fire such as mortar, or artillery rounds. Applications include sleeping quarters, mess halls, anywhere large concentrations of unprotected soldiers might gather, blast walls, and aircraft revetments. A modern form is the Hesco bastion".

File:Virginia, Fort Stedman. View of the interior of - NARA - 533357.jpg|A gabion breastwork (in background) protecting artillery at Fort Stedman in Virginia in the American Civil War File:Porta john hescos.JPG|Modern Hesco bastions

Impact attenuation

Gabions may be used for attenuating dynamic loads, such as those resulting from impacts by vehicles or rockfall. Depending on what they are filled with, gabions may be highly deformable, dissipating impact forces. This has led to the use of recycled materials such as used tires and ballast from railway tracks to fill some rockfall protection embankments.

References

  • Freeman, Gary E.; Fischenich, Craig J.(May 2000), "Gabions for Streambank Erosion Control", Environmental Laboratory, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
  • University of New South Wales Water Research Laboratory, Research Report No. 156, "Some factors affecting the use of Maccaferri gabions and reno mattresses for coastal revetments", October 1979, C. T. Brown, et al.

References

  1. [http://www.ridgeway-online.com/MM/assets/CPD/GabionCPD.pdf ridgeway-online.com]{{dead link. (May 2015)
  2. [https://housemodify.com/gabion-wall/ Gabion Wall]
  3. [http://gabiondesign.be/gabion.html gabiondesign.be] {{webarchive. link. (January 6, 2008)
  4. (September 2014). "Hydraulics, Air Entrainment, and Energy Dissipation on a Gabion Stepped Weir". Journal of Hydraulic Engineering.
  5. [https://www.maccaferri.com/us/success-stories/50-year-old-gabion-structure-river-humber/ Maccaferri river erosion case study]
  6. "Feature Projects - Project 2". gabions.net.
  7. Toblaski, R.A., and N.K. Tripp, 1961. ''Gabions for stream and erosion control.'' Journal of Soil and Water Conservation 16: 284-285.
  8. "Dominus Winery in Napa Valley, California, USA.". floornature.com.
  9. "Dominus Winery". Archiplanet.
  10. (1870). "An elementary course of military engineering". Wiley.
  11. John Hill Burton, ''Register of the Privy Council of Scotland'', vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1878), pp. 210–211.
  12. (June 2013). "Multibody modelling of gabion beams for impact applications". International Journal of Crashworthiness.
  13. (2014-05-23). "Real-scale investigation of the kinematic response of a rockfall protection embankment". Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences.
  14. (August 2020). "An experimental investigation of the response of slender protective structures to rockfall impacts". Canadian Geotechnical Journal.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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