Geosynthetics Industry – From the Beginning…
The Birth of the Geosynthetics Industry: In 1957, after a tropical storm had caused severe beach erosion at the Florida home of the president of Carthage Mills, he joined forces with engineers from the Coastal Engineering Lab at the University of Florida to protect his property against future storms. They eventually developed a tough woven synthetic filter fabric with design properties that permitted water to pass through while holding back sand and particles. In the spring of 1958, a revetment of interlocking concrete blocks was constructed using this innovative plastic material in place of a much more costly and ineffective graded granular filter. This marked the first time ever that a filter fabric had been used in a waterfront structure.
Geosynthetics Industry – Education on New Shoreline Erosion Protection
Carthage Mills then persuaded the late Robert J. Barrett to head up a commercial venture to perfect and market this new concept. Barrett set out to educate the many districts of the US Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and consulting engineers around the world on the benefits of using these new materials. At that time, the standard practice for shoreline erosion protection was limited to articulated concrete blocks, the deployment of large sand bags, concrete and sand filled mattresses, concrete block mattresses, membranes, and gabions – sometimes with and sometimes without the graded granular filter.
USACE Begins Construction of Experimental Projects
The early years were very discouraging. By 1960, Carthage Mills had sold only nine projects, but momentum was beginning to build and their use more widespread. In 1962, the USACE finally agrees to begin construction on a series of experimental projects to determine the overall effectiveness of Carthage Mills’ fabrics and innovative methods of construction. The first sites on the Mississippi and St. Francis Rivers were carefully selected by the Corps …in order to test the filter materials under the most extreme conditions possible. After three years, the Results and Conclusions in the Corps’ official technical reports were unanimous in recognizing Carthage Mills’ fabrics and their recommended construction techniques as superior to every other method currently being employed by the Corps. As a result, the program was extended, additional sites were selected and evaluations would continue for an additional seven years.
As Barrett continued his work with the Corps, his 1966 presentation at the International Conference on Coastal Engineering in Tokyo, Japan of a paper titled Use of Plastic Filters in Coastal Structures was a significant turning point in designer’s and owner’s attitudes. At this time, Carthage Mills was still alone in its endeavors; and until 1967, had the only plastic filter cloths available on the market. By this time, Carthage Mills had printed their 3rd and final version of the world’s first Filter Handbook which was long referred to as the bible or the Book by engineers and contractors worldwide for the design and construction of erosion control systems such as revetments, seawalls, jetties, channel linings, breakwaters and more.
First Specification for Filter Fabrics
In 1972, after extensive urging and teaching by Carthage Mills, and ten years of the experimental projects completed, the USACE Waterways Experiment Station (WES) in Vicksburg, Mississippi issued their first comprehensive specification for filter fabrics including test methods still used today in essentially their original form for percent open area, permeability, apparent opening size and gradient ratio to measure a fabric’s resistance to clogging. This work added considerable credibility to designs incorporating woven plastic filter cloths. By 1976, Carthage Mills’ fabrics had been used in over 3500 projects in 49 states and 26 foreign countries, and Barrett was recognized as the father of filter fabrics. During this period, Barrett had also pioneered the use of filter fabrics in other areas – e.g. French drains, scour protection around bridge piers, fabric wrapped perforated pipe, and the fabric encapsulated sandcore breakwater.
A major breakthrough for the use of geotechnical fabrics in other applications occurred in 1978-1979. Carthage Mills, working with the USACE, participated in the construction of a full-scale embankment test section at Pinto Pass, Mobile, AL. Data obtained from this study were used to develop the first effective design criteria and construction techniques for fabric-reinforced embankments on extremely soft soils. This opened new frontiers for design engineers in the potential future uses of these fabrics. Those first woven filter fabrics, many of which are still in service today, were the forerunners of a modern industry known as the geosynthetics industry, and their innovative uses continue to spawn new ideas in both products and design in civil engineering.
Geosynthetics Industry Today
Today, the many benefits of geosynthetics and their applications are endorsed by contractors, engineers, universities, and governments the world over. And it all started with Carthage Mills – the company that truly pioneered an industry!