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Cardiff International
Sports Village |
91.9% |
Taylor Woodrow Construction undertook the project
with Cardiff County Council as the Client. The contract
was an ICE Design & Construct.
Taylor Woodrow co-ordinated the detailed design for
the remediation, which was undertaken by Churngold Remediation
and Arup. Keller Ground Engineering designed the ground
improvement works and the gas & leachate barrier
and Tony Gee & Partners designed the revetment system.
The site is located on a man-made peninsular within
the fresh-water lake formed by the construction of the
Cardiff Bay Barrage. Construction of the barrage began
in 1994 and freshwater impoundment commenced in 2001.
Cardiff Bay represents an area of major regeneration
in Cardiff, and is protected by the Cardiff Bay Barrage
Act, which sets standards for water quality.
The site had a history of industrial and commercial
land use including the presence of both licensed and
unlicensed landfill tips. Coal discharging operations
and large-scale storage of diesel fuels had resulted
in contamination of the site by heavy metals and hydrocarbons.
The main works undertaken on the site included:
- Exsitu bioremediation of 28,000m3
of hydrocarbon contaminated soil
- Insitu bioremediation of 17,000m3
soil & groundwater
- Removal of hydrocarbon free
product from groundwater
- Major earthworks to relocate
300,000m3 of treated soils in line with end uses
- Treatment and validation of
14,000m3 of Japanese Knotweed infested soils
- Installation of a bentonite
cut off wall with gas membrane and leachate drainage
system to the perimeter of the landfill tip
- Dynamic & vibro-compaction
of 95,000m2 of disused landfill tip
- Installation of a passive
gas venting system to the landfill tip
- Installation of 1600m of sheet
pile revetment including anchor system at the water’s
edge
- Improvement of soft alluvium
by use of band drains and surcharging
Breaking out of hardstandings and the crushing, screening
and reuse of arisings on site
- Use of 50,000m3 of recycled
aggregate
Works on site began in September 2003, and the project
value was approximately £15 million.
The technologies used on site included cutting edge
insitu bioremediation techniques utilizing electrolysis
to treat ground water contamination. The project was
one of the largest bioremediation operations undertaken
in the UK and all hydrocarbon-contaminated soils were
reused on site.
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