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Soft Engineering Training and Demonstration Workshop Resources
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SOFT ENGINEERING TRAINING AND DEMONSTRATION WORKSHOP On October 29-30, 2003, The Greater Detroit American Heritage River Initiative, Michigan Sea Grant, Detroit/Wayne County Port Authority, the City of Detroit, Detroit Riverfront Conservancy, and others hosted a workshop on state-of-the-art soft engineering techniques for shoreline stabilization. This workshop was put together in consultation with Dr. Don Gray (Emeritus Professor of Civil & Environmental Engineering at The University of Michigan and principal author of two books on bio-technical slope soil stabilization) and national experts like John McCullah, President of Salix Applied Earthcare, Inc., of Redding, California. The technical training program was held on October 29th in the Detroit Marriott Renaissance Center. On October 30th innovative, soft engineering techniques were demonstrated on the shoreline of Lake Muscoday on Belle Isle. Funding support for this project was obtained from the Great Lakes Soil Erosion and Sediment Control Program, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service's Coastal Program, and the Michigan Garden Club. Practical information is now available on a number of web sites. Selected site are presented below: Resources listed below.
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Stream Corridor Restoration Principles, Processes, and Practices Federal Interagency Stream Corridor Restoration Working Group
Green County New York Soil and Water Conservation District http://www.gcswcd.com/stream/library/
Washington State Department of Transportation http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/eesc/design/roadside/sb.htm
Southeast Michigan Resource Conservation & Development Council
Nativescape LLC Salix Applied Earthcare |
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Projects |
Soft Engineering Locations Where are soft engineering projects happening in the Detroit River area?
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| Shoreline project could serve as model for the nation By Paula Evans Neuman, The News-Herald GROSSE ILE TWP. - A little brown head poked up above the water a few feet from the workers and bystanders on the shore. See the entire article click here
Conservancy Begins Shoreline Rehabilitation Project on Grosse Ile - June 4th, 2003 |
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Click to for Enlargement of Muscoday Sign |
FUNDING SECURED FOR ADDITIONAL SOFT ENGINEERING ALONG BELLE ISLE'S LAKE MUSCODAY At a July 18, 2002 meeting of the Greater Detroit American Heritage River Initiative Steering Committee, the Detroit-Wayne County Port Authority announced the completion of the first phase of the Lake Muscoday Soft Engineering Project and the initiation of the second phase. The first phase included training for key Belle Isle staff and other interested technical experts, and implementation of soft engineering techniques along 300 feet of shoreline. See article in link: PDF from "Land and Water" (below article) The completion of the first phase was celebrated with the placement of and interpretive sign. Also announced on July 18th was funding for the second phase of shoreline habitat work along Lake Muscoday. Funding was announced from the following organizations: Great Lakes Commission's Soil Erosion and Sediment Control Program ($25,000); U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service ($10,000); Michigan Garden Club ($5,000); and Michigan Sea Grant ($2,500). The second phase will be a two-day hands on training session that will demonstrate soft engineering along another 300 feet of Lake Muscoday shoreline. For more information on the second phase of the soft engineering project, contact John Kerr at the Detroit-Wayne County Port Authority (313-331-3842) of Mark Breederland at Michigan Sea Grant (810-989-6323). |
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Soft Engineering Work on Belle Isle's Lake Muscoday Profiled in the November/December 2001 Issue of Land and Water: The Magazine of Natural Resource Management and Restoration. |
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Region 3, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service |
Dr. John H. Hartig, Refuge Manager Detroit River International Wildlife Refuge Large Lakes Research Station 9311 Groh Road Grosse Ile, MI 48138 Phone: 734-692-7608 Fax: 734-692-7603 E-mail: john_hartig@fws.gov |










