Novel surge barriers for coastal protection (TAMU)
Surge barriers are large hydraulic structures designed to protect infrastructure from coastal storm surges and high tides. Preventing surges from moving into bays and estuaries minimizes the need for other expensive elements of a flood control system, such as levees and floodwalls. Surge barriers can provide cost-effective protection critical transportation infrastructure, such as ports, roads, and bridges. Conventional surge barriers comprise a fixed structure with movable vertically or horizontally opening gates that can be closed during extreme storms and tidal events. Disadvantages of fixed barriers include high cost, sensitivity to waste and silt, potential debris blockage, and constraints to marine traffic. Temporary surge barriers can avoid these disadvantages. This research evaluates three novel temporary barrier concepts: flexible membrane barriers, sinkable floating barriers, and shade curtain barriers. Flexible membrane barriers are self-deploying and permanently located on shore. Buried when not deployed, they rise with rising water due to their buoyancy. Sinkable floating barriers rest on the seabed when not deployed and, when needed, are raised to the surface by pumping air into a tube. Shade curtains are fabric barriers attached to an existing bridge. When not deployed, it is secured to the underside of the bridge deck. In advance of a surge, the fabric curtain is lowered using a sinker-cable system to provide a vertical barrier extending from the bridge deck to the seabed. Hydraulic loads are transmitted from the barrier to the bridge and its foundations, which must be capable of resisting the added loads. This project addresses three key issues related to temporary surge barrier deployment: site conditions for which temporary surge barriers are appropriate, hydraulic loading on the barriers, and structural/geotechnical design considerations for the barriers.
Language
- English
Project
- Status: Active
- Funding: $60,000.00
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Contract Numbers:
69A3552348330
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Sponsor Organizations:
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology
University Transportation Centers Program
Department of Transportation
Washington, DC United States 20590Coastal Research and Transportation Education (CREATE) University Transportation Center
Texas State University
San Marcos, TX United States 78666Texas A&M Transportation Institute
Texas A&M University System
3135 TAMU
College Station, TX United States 77843-3135 -
Managing Organizations:
Coastal Research and Transportation Education (CREATE) University Transportation Center
Texas State University
San Marcos, TX United States 78666 -
Project Managers:
Bruner, Britain
Kulesza, Stacey
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Performing Organizations:
Texas A&M Transportation Institute
Texas A&M University System
3135 TAMU
College Station, TX United States 77843-3135 -
Principal Investigators:
Aubeny, Charles
- Start Date: 20260101
- Expected Completion Date: 20270531
- Actual Completion Date: 0
- USDOT Program: University Transportation Centers Program
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Coast and river protective works; Design; Flood protection; Infrastructure; Storm surges; Temporary barriers
- Subject Areas: Bridges and other structures; Design; Geotechnology; Hydraulics and Hydrology; Transportation (General);
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 01978100
- Record Type: Research project
- Source Agency: Coastal Research and Transportation Education (CREATE) University Transportation Center
- Contract Numbers: 69A3552348330
- Files: UTC, RIP
- Created Date: Jan 31 2026 11:29AM