Forest Lake Reservoir Project & Photos
In December 1998, the District
purchased the Forest Lake Reservoir from California-American Water
Company (Cal-Am) pursuant to a quid-pro-quo agreement. The reservoir
is currently being rehabilitated and new improvements are being
constructed to meet the State Water Resources Department Division of
Safety of Dams (DSOD) requirements. Upon completion of the construction, the
reservoir will provide 325 acre feet of storage capacity. It will be
filled with recycled water during winter months when there is excess
production at the Carmel Area Wastewater District’s treatment plant.
Stored recycled water will be used during summer months when the
irrigation demands exceed the production, thereby further reducing the
use of potable water.
The
Forest Lake Reservoir improvements include installation of a hypalon
liner with a thickness of 65 mil (.065 inch) and leak detection system
on the interior reservoir surface, reconstruction of an exterior
section of the north embankment, construction of new concrete
intake/outlet structure and installation of new pipelines for
connection between the new reservoir and algae removal treatment
facility and the existing distribution system and overflow line.
The new treatment facility includes three microstrainers to remove
algae, two pumps with the peak demand capacity to pump 4.5 million
gallons per day to the distribution system, instrumentation controls
integrated with the existing Supervisory Control and Data Acquisition
(SCADA) system and chemical process equipment for adjusting pH levels
and disinfection of recycled water prior to entering the distribution
system. The existing outlet of the overflow line will be
extended 200 feet and an energy dissipation structure will be
constructed at Sawmill Gulch creek below Colton Road.
On
March 16, 2005, the District awarded $10,936,000 contract to the
Anderson Pacific Engineering Construction, Inc. for construction of
the improvements. Construction started in late March 2005
and is anticipated to be completed in the spring of 2006. This schedule
will allow the reservoir to be
filled with recycled water over the wet season to be used in the 2006
irrigation season. Construction management is being provided by E2
Consulting Engineers pursuant to a $978,500 contract. The
project is being financed entirely by the sale proceeds of a portion of
Pebble Beach Company’s water entitlements obtained in return for
financially guaranteeing the first phase of the Reclamation project.
Water entitlements are offered to the residential users within Pebble
Beach.
Construction Progress
Report April 2006
Anderson
Pacific Engineering Construction, Inc. (Anderson Pacific) made good
progress on construction of the Forest Lake Reservoir Components of
the Expanded CAWD/PBCSD Wastewater Reclamation Project.
The contractor performed initial testing of the microstrainers,
plant feed pumps, chemical feed systems for chlorine injection and pH
adjustment and miscellaneous mechanical and electrical equipment in
the chemical building. Instrumentation
subcontractor Tesco Controls installed programming for the
instrumentation controls located at the chemical and maintenance
department buildings and calibrated a number of measuring devices
required for automatic control of the treatment facility. Recycled
water from the reservoir is available for the distribution system
through manual operation of the treatment facilities.
The
reservoir is filled with recycled water to the permitted storage
capacity of 325 acre-feet or 105 million gallons.
No water has been observed to date from the leak detection
system below the liner. Water
stored in the reservoir initially had a green tint indicating the
presence of algae, which was confirmed by high chlorophyll and pH
concentrations measured in water sample testing.
Poor water clarity in the reservoir was confirmed by a Secchi
disc measurement of less than 18 inches.
Within the past two weeks the water in the reservoir become
clearer with a Secchi disc measurement of approximately 6 feet and the
green tint was replaced with a light brown tint. Water
samples are collected weekly and chlorophyll and pH concentrations
also dropped significantly.
Professor
Alex Horne, Professor Emeritus, Ecological Engineering,
University
of
California
at
Berkeley
and an expert limnologist, participated in the design of algae control
measures including the mixer and air flow bubbler systems.
Professor Horne recently visited the project and indicated all
reservoirs experience considerable fluctuations in algal growth levels
initially. He believes the
initial green color was a large concentration of small green algae.
He collected water samples for microscopic examination,
observed a species of rotifer that eat or graze on algae was abundant
and the rotifers were healthy with full green guts. Algal
growth occurs in the upper layer of the reservoir exposed to sunlight.
Algae control measures were designed to keep the reservoir
water moving and keep the algae from settling in the upper layer.
Professor Horne has recommended adding a species of crustacean
zooplankton that graze at a rate about 100 times greater than rotifers
to help keep the reservoir balanced naturally. While
the application of chemicals like copper sulfate or chlorine is a very
effective method of killing algae, the algae grazers are also killed
and the natural balance of the reservoir goes back to square one.
Anderson
Pacific has earned $10,977,046 or 94 % of the revised construction
contract amount of $11,656,726. E2
Consulting Engineers has earned $929,356 or 95 % of the budget of
$978,420 for construction management services.
ADDITIONAL WORK
Change
order number 11 was executed by the General Manager in April
increasing the sum of the construction contract by $125,000 as
described below.
Change Order No. 11 (+$125,000)
a)
Install four security cameras mounted on two new poles near the outlet
structure and on the chemical building.
Signals will be transmitted wirelessly to from the remote
locations to the chemical building (+$65,000)
b)
Install
fiber optic line between
Forest
Lake
chemical building and maintenance building. (+$60,000)
Ten
change orders totaling $720,726 have been executed to date increasing
the contract value to $11,656,726.
The
Board previously authorized the General Manager to approve change
orders for this project within an aggregate limit of $775,000, or 7 %
of the original contract amount of $10,936,000.
The four-way construction and operations agreement requires the
consent of the Pebble Beach Company prior to reimbursement for any
changes above the 5 % contingency level.
Construction Progress
by Photos
(CLICK ON PHOTOS BELOW TO VIEW A LARGER IMAGE)
March 31, 2005
The contractor mobilized and commenced excavation.
April 2005
The
interior surface was cleared and grubbed. Excavation at the
treatment plant area commenced. Unforeseen underground conditions were
encountered while grading the historical low spot and while removing
the concrete apron around the perimeter. Unsuitable wet material
encountered at the low spot at depths of up to 11 feet was
removed and regraded with suitable material approved by California
Department of Water Resources, Division of Safety of Dams (DSOD).
May 2005
Construction
of the backwash structure at the treatment plant area started. Retired
Board member William R. Gianelli visited the construction site on May
3, 2005.
The
contractor completed the clearing and grubbing operations, and
commenced rough grading on the interior of the reservoir with suitable
material approved by DSOD.
Stone
cobbles discovered under the perimeter concrete apron increased the
work for surface demolition. Unsuitable wet material was removed at
the low spot.
June 2005
Concrete
placement at the backwash structure was completed. DSOD field engineer
inspected the keyway excavation for the outlet structure.
Contractor started
construction of the outlet structure and the concrete anchor for the
lining system along the perimeter of reservoir at the top of the
embankment.
Keyway excavation at the
exterior slope of the north embankment started.
July 2005
Contractor
completed foundation and lower wall section as well as steel framing of
the outlet structure. Also completed was 75% of the rough grading
work on the interior.
Keyway excavation at the
exterior slope of the north embankment was completed.
August 2005
Contractor completed
tunnel jacking and boring of the 48-inch steel casing and 36-inch
concrete emergency drain pipe through the reservoir embankment for the
overflow outlet line.
At the north embankment
keyway fill and chimney drain construction was completed. Construction
of the buttress fill started.
Steel placement for the
roof of the outlet structure and grading for the chemical building pad
were completed.
Contractor completed 70%
of the anchor for the lining system along the perimeter at the top of
the embankment. At the bottom of the reservoir monitoring drain lines
were installed. The lines will be located underneath reservoir liner and will
drain by gravity.
September 2005
Installation of the
hypalon liner (tan color) on top of geotextile matt (black color).
95% of the north
embankment improvements was completed. Electrical conduits at the
chemical building at treatment facility were laid out.
Concrete emergency
dissipation structure located near Sawmill Gulch Creek was
constructed. 24-inch emergency drain line was extended to the
emergency dissipation structure installed.
Inlet line which will
supply recycled water produced by the CAWD Tertiary Treatment
Plant to the reservoir was installed. The roof of the outlet structure
was completed.
October 2005
Reservoir 36-inch drain
line installed and ready for cover. Second jack and bore pit with for
18-inch line.
Twin (underwater) mixer
base completed. DuPont Hypalon liner installation in-progress.
Close-up of twin (underwater) mixer motors (minus propellers).
Air distribution
(underwater bubbler) piping being installed. Installation of reservoir plastic liner
nearing completion around the outlet structure.
November 2005
Bridgeway access to outlet
structure in place. Final section of reservoir to be covered by
plastic liner.
December 2005
Twin submersible slow
speed mixers with 78" Diameter banana propeller blades.
Chemical building masonry walls completed.
Interior details of
chemical building. Lifting electrical equipment into the chemical building.
January 2006
Roof installation for
chemical building. The ResQ Disc is thrown like a Frisbee, the
12" disc spins to unreel 100 feet of buoyant, 500lb. test line.
Drowning victims can grab onto the line and be pulled to safety—without
the danger of a rescuer jumping into the water. PBCSD Maintenance
crew will carry one in each truck.
Submersible mixer
electrical controls - mixers in background. Leak detection system monitoring
manhole.
Landscaped Sawmill Gulch
outlet structure. Strainers will be installed to remove algae from
recycled water.
February 2006
Bridge access to the
Reservoir Outlet Structure. Motor control center in the chemical
building.
Reservoir has approximately
100 acre-feet of recycled water. Air diffusers (bubblers) in
operation.
March 2006
As water level rises the
submersible mixers are almost under water. Outlet structure in
background. Life ring and safety rope station. 34 such station are
located around the Reservoir.
As of March 17th water
level has risen as recycled water continues to be pumped into the
Reservoir. First signs of wildlife enjoying the Reservoir.