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The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Date post: 19-Jan-2018
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Seawalls, Bulkheads, and Revetments Seawalls are usually massive, vertical structures used to protect backshore areas from heavy wave action Bulkheads are large vertical retaining walls used to reduce loss of land to the sea and to protect backshore areas from wave action Revetments are shoreline structures generally sloped in such a way as to mimic the natural slope of the shoreline profile and dissipate wave energy as the wave is directed up the slope
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The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline Ben McGinnis GLY 558 – Introduction to Coastal Management
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Page 1: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Ben McGinnisGLY 558 – Introduction to Coastal Management

Page 2: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Seawalls, Bulkheads, and Revetments

• Seawalls are usually massive, vertical structures used to protect backshore areas from heavy wave action

• Bulkheads are large vertical retaining walls used to reduce loss of land to the sea and to protect backshore areas from wave action

• Revetments are shoreline structures generally sloped in such a way as to mimic the natural slope of the shoreline profile and dissipate wave energy as the wave is directed up the slope

Page 3: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Why don’t they work?

• Lacks the flexibility of a dune system

• A change in beach slope is not allowed

• Longshore currents scour sand from the base of the seawall

• Loss of sand from reflected wave energy

Page 4: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Wave Energy

• Dissipates over the surface of a natural beach

• Seawalls reflect wave energy

• Reflected wave energy stirs up the sand and washes it out to sea

Page 5: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Sandbridge Beach, Virginia• Bulkheading began

around 1988• Primarily Steel• Beach has narrowed

and flattened• Rebuilt bulkheads• Old bulkheads in

surfzone• Beach nourishment

1998 and 2002

Page 6: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Interesting Pointsfrom: The Beaches are Moving: The Drowning of America’s Shoreline

Kaufman, W., and Pilkey, O.H., 1983

• No erosion problem exists on beaches until people build on them.

• Anything built along the coast increases erosion rates due to the lack of flexibility in the beach system.

• Once beach protection is started it’s can’t be stopped.

• To “save” the beach, we must destroy it. • The cost to save property is greater than the value

of the property.

Page 7: The Effect of Seawall Construction on the Coastline

Seawalls are constructed to protect beachfront homes, but

how can you have a beachfront home when there is no beach?


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