Innovative construction tie-in detail ensures Lethbridge Water Treatment Plant maintains production during UV installation

 
Ultraviolet Disinfection System

The City of Lethbridge operates a 150 million litre per day water treatment plant, which supplies drinking water to its 77,000 residents, as well as commercial, industrial, institutional, and agricultural sectors. To address growing concerns regarding drinking water quality, Alberta Environment established more stringent standards, including 4 log (99.99%) inactivation of Giardia, bacteria common in raw water supplies. The City was faced with significant and expensive chemical disinfection upgrades to meet this standard, and sought a more economical solution.

The advent of ultraviolet (UV) disinfection for waterborne cysts such as Giardia and Cryptosporidium offered such a solution. Not only would UV allow the City to defer an intermediate 3 log inactivation requirement, saving them $500,000, but the City would also be able to reduce the projected capital budget for 4 log inactivation from $20 million to $5 million.

The stringent regulatory deadline challenged the design team of Associated Engineering, CH2M Hill, and the City stakeholders to meet an aggressive implementation schedule. To meet the deadline, the City decided to manage construction, thus expediting implementation. This approach allowed the City to start construction two months earlier than a conventional design-bid-build project. Long delivery items were pre-ordered, including the UV reactors, large diameter butterfly valves, and magnetic flow meters.

The UV disinfection facility was designed for 150 million litres per day to match the plant capacity. Five, 600 millimetre diameter, Trojan UVSwift reactors with a capacity of 50 million litres per day each were installed to meet the capacity, plus a minimum 50% redundancy requirement. Chemical injection points for chlorine were installed upstream and downstream of the reactors. Fluoride and ammonia injection points were installed downstream of the reactors for induction with a hydraulic mixer. As an added benefit, UV disinfection allowed the City to maintain chloramination in the distribution system, which was a consumer preference over free chlorination. Ammonia used for chloramination had to be kept downstream of the UV reactors due to potential interference with the UV transmittance.

To maintain drinking water production, the City needed to keep the water treatment plant clearwell on-line during the construction tie-in. The City and the design team explored a number of options for bypassing the clearwell during construction, but none of these was deemed feasible.

The team developed an innovative tie-in detail that allowed the plant to remain on-line during construction. The live tie-in involved pre-drilling 50 millimetre diameter pilot holes through the clearwell walls to guide divers from the inside. Divers then attached 900 millimetre diameter “top hats” over each pilot hole. These top hats were raised blind flanges, gasketted around the edge and bolted to the inside of the clearwell wall. Isolation valves on the pilot holes were then opened to relieve the pressure behind the top hats; the pressure from the water inside the clearwell effectively sealed the top hats to the wall.

The top hats formed an annulus against the wall that allowed a coring machine to drill a 750 millimetre diameter hole from the outside into this annulus. Once the cores were completed, the outlet and inlet piping headers to the clearwell were installed, grouted in place, and a cast-in-place concrete thrust structure was poured to hold the header in position. The top hats were then removed from the inside of the clearwell.

Construction was completed and the plant commissioned by December 2003, meeting the regulatory deadline. The project, originally estimated at $5 million, was completed $900,000 under budget.

Andy Barr, Project Manager for Associated Engineering, states, “The success of the project was due to the collaborative role that the City played with the design team throughout design and construction.”

“The City of Lethbridge is very pleased with our new facility,” reports Doug Kaupp, the City’s Water Utility Manager. “It [the UV facility] has operated flawlessly for the first year and has served to reassure the community that our drinking water is of the highest quality.”

Other Associated Engineering staff involved in the project included Gord Roberts, Stella Tanner, Scott Witzke, Shane Hemenway, the late Franz Bintoro, Sharon Schepicoff, and Barry Vallance.


 In This Issue
  1. New stormwater management
    works mitigate flooding in
    southwest Calgary

  2. Associated Engineering receives the 2005 Healthy Workplace Initiative Award
     
    Dongning Li receives National
    CSCE Award

  3. Hyde Creek Integrated Watershed Management Plan protects Environmental and community values

  4. Associated Engineering hosts
    Water Resources Conference


    Value Engineering team
    identifies major cost savings for
    new Burloak Water Puriification
    Plant

  1. Bill De Angelis balances successful career and busy family life

  2. Associated Engineering raises over $18,000 for cancer research

    Associated Engineering bids Happy Retirement to a fine Scotsman, George McGeachie

  3. Kelowna Triathlon grows

    Edmonton office building renamed “Associated Engineering Plaza”
  1. Dean Shiskowski completes leading edge research in nitrogen removal
     
    Canadian Water Resources Association recognizes John van der Erden

    AWWA awards Life Membership to Hwei Suan

  2. Employee News

  3. Vince Borch retires as Chairman of the Board




 
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