The purpose of these specifications is to assure that
utilities which are to be turned over to the Town for maintenance
shall be so constructed as to cause a minimum of maintenance and a
maximum of benefit to the Town. They shall, therefore, be strictly
adhered to. Failure of the developer, his agents, employees, or subcontractors
to comply shall be considered sufficient cause by the Town to not
accept the utilities or any portion thereof for dedication until all
work is satisfactory.
All construction shall at all times be subject to inspection by the Town Board, its agents, representatives, and authorized employees. Such inspectors may stop the work when the developer or his contractor has no competent foreman in charge of the work, or when the work or materials do not meet these specifications, or when circumstances are such that continuance of that particular phase of the work would not be in the best interest of the Town. Costs incurred for inspection services for dedicated and Town related facilities shall be borne by the developer, and sufficient funds shall be part of the letter of credit. (See § A125-18, Establishment and issuance.)
Failure of the Town, the Town Engineer, their
agents, employees or representatives to reject improper work or inferior
material during construction shall not be construed as, nor imply,
final acceptance. If subsequent inspection, operation, or circumstances
cause defects to become evident, the developer shall make, or cause
to be made, such cuts or other exposures of the work as may be required
to determine cause of such defects. Such defects shall then be corrected
to the satisfaction of the Town at the expense of the developer.
Responsibility for work. The developer is solely responsible
to the Town for proper construction of utilities. It will normally
be of benefit to both the developer and the Town to have Town representatives
deal directly with the developer's contractors where such are employed,
both as a matter of expedience and to avoid needless liaison. However,
such action shall not be construed as relieving the developer of his
prime responsibility to the Town.
The developer or his contractor, where work
and responsibility has been so delegated, shall locate all existing
sewers, water mains, underground conduits, gas mains or other utilities
in the work area prior to commencing operations. Appropriate utility
officials shall receive prior notice of intent to start construction,
and their recommendations and orders shall be followed.
Care shall be taken to protect persons and property,
and to avoid potentially hazardous conditions or nuisances. The developer
and his contractor shall comply with all stipulations of the Occupational
Safety and Health Act of 1970 and all revisions and amendments thereto.
The developer shall warrant all work performed
and materials furnished against defect, failure, inadequacy, or breakage
for a period of two years from the date of final acceptance of the
work by the Town Board. A certified check or warranty bond shall be
deposited with the Town prior to the acceptance of the work. In the
event of defect, failure, inadequacy, or breakage during said warranty
period, the developer shall make the necessary repairs or replacements
within two days of the receipt of written notice from the Town Board
or its Engineer.
Amount of Warranty Bond Required by the
Town
Project Construction Cost
Amount of Warrant Bond as a Percent of
the Construction Cost
Should the developer fail, neglect, or refuse
to make the necessary repairs or replacements within the specified
time, the Town shall make the necessary repairs or replacements, for
the account of the developer, and deduct all costs therefor from the
monies or securities being held by the Town to ensure compliance during
the warranty period.
The developer shall notify the Town 45 days
prior to the expiration date of the warranty bond. The Town will then
provide punch-list of work to be corrected, if any, so developer may
make necessary repairs prior to completion of the warranty period
or warranty will be extended.
All construction work shall be properly staked
out by competent engineering personnel in accordance with the approved
plan. Such stakeout shall be in sufficient detail to ensure correct
elevations of tops of structures, proper crowns, slopes, and alignments.
Protection of incomplete works. Where work is left
incomplete, because of weather or other reasons, it shall be protected.
Road beds shall be left well-drained. Storm drains shall be so protected
that surface water, mud, silt, and debris cannot enter. Sever laterals,
water services, and valves shall be suitably marked with stakes, and
shall be protected.
Final drawings. Prior to acceptance of the utilities
by the Town, the developer shall submit an "as-built" plan. This plan
shall be drawn to scale and shall indicate by dimensions, angles and
distances, as applicable, the location of sewer and drain Y-branches,
laterals, manholes, catch basins, hydrants, valves, curb shutoffs,
road profiles and center-line elevations and final grading plan showing
swales and ditches. Plan shall show easements and dedicated roadways.
As-built plans shall be submitted to the Town on a reproducible "Mylar"
or equivalent.
Prior to acceptance of the utilities by the
Town, the developer shall fully complete the work and leave the site
in a neat and orderly condition. Slopes, drainageways and other graded
areas shall be fully stabilized by planting grass or other vegetation
or by such means acceptable to the Town.
Grading between adjacent lots as well as between
lots and the street area shall have a continuity without abrupt changes
in elevation or unfinished ground surface.
All areas shall be so graded that runoff from
higher elevation lots does not create a nuisance on lower elevation
lots. To this extent lots shall normally be graded to drain front-and-back
with street drainage system taking the front drainage and shallow
swales taking the back-lot-line drainage.
Materials - general requirements. All materials used
in the work shall meet the requirements as specified, unless the same
are altered by specified requirements under any itemized specification
or by modifying notes shown upon the plans. In the absence of any
specific reference to specifications, the material to be incorporated
into any project, and the work to be performed are intended to conform
to the NYS Department of Transportation specifications, as determined
by the Town Engineer.
Basis of construction. In order to assure the structural
integrity of the subgrade and "crusher run" stone foundation course
the following general rules shall apply:
Where crossover trenches are required for utility
services, the trenches shall be backfilled with the excavated material,
if acceptable and approved by Town Inspector, or No. 2 crusher run
stone. Material shall be compacted in six-inch layers with vibrating
tamping equipment. (Developers note that this includes crossovers
for gas mains and other utilities and services.)
After properly shaping and obtaining approval
of the subgrade, the crusher run foundation course may be placed.
The entire foundation course - out to out - must be vibra-tamped.
Foundation courses for permanent roads must
not be used for access or haul roads in wet weather or during winter,
or at such times when the subgrade could become "pumped" into the
foundation course.
Where pavements must be placed in an embankment
condition the entire height of embankment must be constructed with
the use of standard and appropriate compaction equipment. This equipment
shall consist of sheepsfoot rollers, vibratory roller or similar equipment.
Entire embankment area shall be compacted to 95% modified AASHO density.
If required by the Town Engineer, the developer shall provide results
of certified compaction tests undertaken by a competent soils testing
laboratory.
Roadway excavation. Material from clearing and grubbing
and the removal of sod and topsoil shall be stored for later use,
or placed in the embankment beyond the pavement limits as directed
by the Town Engineer. All stumps, brush, trees, and other rubbish
shall be disposed of in a manner satisfactory to the Town.
Work. The contractor shall excavate for the
base, pavement and gutters to the designed subgrade elevation and
6 inches wider on each side than the designed pavement and gutter
width as shown on the "Typical Road Section"[1] and as indicated in the following specifications.
Method. The subgrade shall be constructed following
the depth and alignment of the stakes established by the developer's
licensed land surveyor or engineer for this purpose. These stakes
shall be at intervals of not more than 50 feet and at 25 feet in areas
on grades of less than 0.5%.
After being excavated to the proper depth the
subgrade shall be graded and crowned 1/4 of an inch to each foot of
width on each side of center line, allowing for extra three feet by
eight inches wedge excavation as shown on "Typical Road Section,"[2] and rolled thoroughly with a ten-ton three-wheeled roller
or vibratory roller capable of producing a minimum dynamic vibration
force of 27,000 lbs. Any unsuitable material found below subgrade
shall be removed and replaced by approved No. 2 crusher run stone
and compacted in six-inch lifts. If the fine grade becomes rutted,
it shall be regraded and rolled before the base is put in.
No base shall be put in over unstable trenches
or soft spots. If this condition should arise, the soil should be
removed and filled with R.O.B. gravel. The contractor is responsible
for any settling in finished pavement.
Work. The contractor shall furnish and put in
place a twelve-inch base of No. 2 crusher-run dolomite limestone in
one six-inch and two three-inch lifts as shown on the "Typical Standard
Road Section"[3] and as further described in the following specifications.
After proper rolling and grading of the subgrade
the three feet by eight inches wedge is to be filled with No. 1 crushed
stone and corrugated metal pipe underdrain.
The six-inch and first three-inch lift shall
be placed and graded, maintaining the specified crown of 1/4 inch
per foot and rolled thoroughly with a vibratory compactor capable
of producing a minimum dynamic vibration force of 27,000 lbs.
The last lift of three inches shall be placed
and graded to conform to the lines and grades as shown on the "Typical
Road Section."[4] All depressions and/or bony areas shall be brought to
grade and/or choked with No. 00s and No. 1 crushed dolomite limestone.
The material shall then be rolled thoroughly with a vibratory roller
from the gutter to the center line.
Special care should be given during this operation
not to harm the concrete gutter; i.e., scraping with grader blade
or hitting with roller wheels. Special attention should also be given
to obtain good compaction next to the gutter.
Work. The contractor shall furnish and place
Portland cement concrete gutters as shown on the plans and in accordance
with the thickness and cross section as shown on the "Typical Road
Section"[5] and as stated in the following specifications.
Material. The material shall conform to the
January 2, 1962, State of New York, Department of Transportation,
Division of Construction, Public Works Specifications "Item 98-Concrete
Gutters." The concrete shall have a minimum compression strength of
3,500 psi after 28 days, using a six bag mix with 6% plus or minus
entrained cement.
Method. The concrete gutters shall be constructed
of the shape shown on the "Typical Road Section"[6] and shall conform to the lines and grades shown on the
plans and as approved by the Town.
Standard six-inch steel forms shall be used
and set to the grade and alignment by stakes established by the project
engineer for this purpose. These stakes shall be set at intervals
of not more than 50 feet and 25 feet in flat areas on grades of less
than 0.8%. The base that these forms are set upon shall be graded
to obtain a full six inches of concrete particularly under the invert.
This base material between forms shall be compacted by mechanical
means preferably a vibra-tamper. These forms shall be oiled before
the pouring of concrete.
Expansion joints shall be installed every 50
feet with fracture (or dummy) joints every 10 feet, an expansion joint
shall be installed at the end of a days work or wherever the pouring
of concrete is stopped for any reason. (The intent of this last clause
is to prevent the disturbance of concrete which has reached its initial
set.) Expansion joints shall be constructed of one-half-inch premolded
joint material.
To ensure positive flow the gutter shall be
screeded longitudinally with a suitable straight edge. The screed
shall be worked laterally, i.e., parallel with the center line of
the gutter from the invert of the gutter to the outer edges. This
process shall be done at the appropriate time during the setting of
the concrete. When gutters are installed by this "hand method" special
attention should be given to the "spading" of the concrete along the
sides of the forms. The gutter may also be installed by use of an
approved gutter machine using the proper screed to form the invert
shown on "Typical Road Section,"[7] and equipped with a vibrator attachment.
At the appropriate time the concrete shall be
broomed lightly with a fine-bristled broom and edged with a proper
metal edging tool. This brooming is to fill small voids thus making
it unnecessary to do an excessive amount of floating and troweling
which brings too much water to the surface causing spalling of the
finished concrete in the future.
The forms shall not be removed until the concrete
is sufficiently "set" to prevent chipping of the edges. The gutter
shall be backfilled as soon as possible to prevent undermining of
the gutter in case of precipitation. The gutters shall be protected
from traffic for a sufficient length of time to avoid damage to them.
Cold weather concreting. Concrete gutters shall
not be installed while there is frost in the ground. Gutters installed
in the cold weather shall be suitably covered by straw, hay or other
means to prevent freezing.
Wet weather concreting. Concrete gutters shall
not be installed where there is water lying between the forms or where
the gravel is soft from rain. Gutters installed (unavoidably) during
a rainstorm shall be covered by a waterproof material immediately.
The concrete gutter shall be cured by spraying
with "Accure" manufactured by the Allerton Chemical Company, "Polyclear"
manufactured by the UPCO Company, or an approved equal. The spray
shall be applied to the gutter at the coverage rate as specified by
the manufacturer.
Work. The contractor shall furnish and construct
a two-course bituminous concrete pavement laid to conform to the required
thickness and cross section as shown on the plan and on the "Typical
Road Section"[8] and as further described in the following specifications.
Material. The material shall conform to the
January 2, 1962, State of New York, Department of Public Works, Division
of Construction, Public Works Specification Item 51, Type 1A. Upon
request the contractor shall furnish the Engineer in writing the source
of the material and provide a written description of the material
to be used including size and percentage of the aggregate and asphalt.
The Engineer reserves the right to modify the percentages of the aggregates
to be used.
Method. Before starting the laying of the asphalt
pavement the base shall be graded and compacted between the concrete
gutters according to the plan. Also, manholes should be adjusted to
the proper grade to meet the crown and slope of the finished pavement.
The asphalt shall be applied in two courses
consisting of a two-inch binder course and a one-inch top course,
compacted thickness. The pavement shall be laid by an approved self-propelled,
crawler mounted, asphalt spreader manned by competent operators. The
top course shall be applied the season following the season the binder
course was applied. (Binder shall be through a freeze-thaw cycle prior
to topping.)
Before applying the top course any irregularities
found in the binder course shall be eliminated. At no time will "cold
patch" or winter mix be used for any purpose.
Protection of new pavement shall be provided
until properly set. This protection is necessary on subdivisions where
the traffic is mostly by cars starting and stopping or by heavy trucks.
Maintenance of roadway. The developer shall be responsible
for maintaining and protecting the roadway and temporary cul-de-sac
and/or turnaround during the warranty period. If subsequent subdivision
sections are built utilizing the roadway for access and/or haul road
during construction, the developer shall be responsible for special
maintenance provisions. These provisions could be placing or replacing
topping, periodic cleaning and flushing of the road surface and repair
of any structural damage. The developer shall submit a schedule of
his proposed "road maintenance program" to the Town indicating how
the roadway will be maintained, a timetable for the proposed maintenance
and an estimate of cost. This schedule shall be reviewed and approved
by the Town and shall become part of the project work. The approved
estimated amount for maintenance shall be included in the letter of
credit.
Roadside swales. Where a grass swale is used with
the approval of the Town, special attention shall be given to shaping
and permanently establishing swales in a manner to minimize erosion,
jute mesh and/or mulching shall be utilized to establish thick vegetative
cover.
To promote and protect the public health, safety,
and welfare it shall be the policy of the Town Planning Board to control
the number of entrances and exits onto and off from state, county,
and Town highways.
This policy is adopted toward the end that safer
highways shall result, more cohesive neighborhoods be developed, and
abutting property owners shall not be unduly and unnecessarily inconvenienced
in the future when it becomes necessary to widen highways to accommodate
greater traffic flows.
To implement the policy described in Subsection J(1) of this statement of policy, the Town Planning Board shall from time to time, as part of the process of approving sketches, maps, plots, plats, or plans require that the applicant grant to the Town of Rush such easements as are required to provide access to contiguous properties onto a public highway via frontage or service roads, common driveway, or such other roadways as are required so that the number of entrances and exits onto and off from state, county, and Town highways are not increased.
Frontage roads and drives. The Planning Board will
review all frontage roads and drives in relation to access, ability
to support traffic loads, traffic circulation, drainage and maintenance.
All private roads shall be named and marked with an approved sign
for adequate identification for emergency and fire situations. The
conditions and standards for frontage roads are as follows:
Right-of-way. A right-of-way or shall be at
least 60 feet in width and each owner shall own a fee interest in
a part of said right-of-way that is at least 20 feet in width. Ownership
of said twenty-foot-wide parcel may be in common with others.
Roadside swales are to be provided. Swale inverts
to be 10 inches lower than road subgrade. Swales are to be graded
to a minimum slope of 1% to provide positive drainage to the nearest
watercourse. Swale side slopes to be graded to at least a one vertical
to three horizontal slope and seeded to provide a healthy growth of
grass.
If a road or street intended for dedication is part
of a subdivision development, consideration for dedication of said
road or street or portion thereof will be made only and after the
following conditions have been met:
That the development as originally approved
by the Planning Board is substantially completed. The decision to
accept a road for dedication is a policy determination within the
sole discretion of the Town Board of the Town of Rush and its Highway
Superintendent. Nothing in this chapter shall require that such determination
and acceptance occur unless both the Town Board and the Highway Superintendent
determine that it is in the public interest to do so. No landowner
in the Town shall enjoy the right to or have a property interest in
having any of its lands accepted as a public highway in the Town.
That the standards set forth in this Chapter A125, Design Criteria and Construction Specifications, for all improvements have been met and approved by the Town Engineer in writing.
The Town will require security for the entire
road or portion thereof or other improvements in the form of a letter
of credit and a maintenance bond in an amount and for a length of
time to be established by the Town Board and the Town Engineer.
That when a subdivision has received Town approval
to be developed and constructed in phases, a road or street in a single
phase of the development that is substantially completed may be considered
for dedication at that time.
In order to provide for the health, safety and general
welfare of the residents who reside on a road or street intended for
eventual dedication, the Town of Rush will consider, subject to an
agreement executed by both parties, providing such services as snow
plowing to permit the safe passage of emergency vehicles and school
buses, prior to the final completion and/or approval of the Town Engineer.
The Town may require that a temporary turnaround for these vehicles
be provided, that a program of erosion and dust control be followed
and that whenever possible a secondary or work road be used for construction
related vehicles during the construction of the remaining homes in
the subdivision development.
All water main construction and related work
shall be done in accordance with the Monroe County Water Authority's
"Rules and Regulations for Developers and Developer's Engineer," "Standard
Specifications for Material to be furnished by Developers," and "Detailed
Specifications for the Installation of Mains and Services."
Use frame and grate as manufactured by the Borden
Metal Products (rectangular type B J/twelve-inch grates and frames,
per DPW drawing 65-45C, galvanized) or approved equal. Use Borden
frame and grate as follows:
Precast concrete drop inlets shall be used.
The drop inlet shall be 4,000 psi air entrained concrete, five-inch
reinforced walls, six-inch reinforced base as manufactured by Warren
Concrete Products Inc., or approved equal. Drop inlets shall be precast
with four-inch drain pipe on three sides as shown on the Standard
Detail.[2]
The inlets shall be positioned to allow for
eight inches of concrete cap between the top of precast structure
and the bottom of frame and grate as part of the concrete apron.
Before pouring the concrete apron, the frame
shall be adjusted on drop inlet wall to allow a 1 1/2 inches
drop from invert of gutter to top of grate (except under special conditions).
This drop shall be formed gradually in the invert.
The drop inlet shall be provided with 1's and
2's crushed stone around the exterior, extending from the bottom of
the drop inlet to the top of the masonry wall on a two-on-one slope.
This stone shall be compacted before pouring of the concrete apron.
The lateral pipe leading from the drop inlet
to the storm manhole shall be encased in 1's and 2's crushed stone
and extending to the top of the trench. This pipe shall be perforated
corrugated metal pipe, bituminous coated, 16 gage.
Stormwater drain pipe shall be built of vitrified
clay pipe, concrete pipe, asbestos cement pipe with plastic couplings
or corrugated metal pipe bituminous coated.
The pipe shall be designed as to proper strength
classification by the developer's licensed professional engineer and
shall be stated on the plans. Height of cover, nature of foundation
soil, type of bedding and trench width shall be considered in specifying
the pipe. Developer shall be responsible for providing extra strength
bedding, cradle or encasement if the design conditions cannot be met
in the field. Whenever the storm drain is under the road, the Town
requires that the developer's engineer specify the correct class for
H-20 loading at the depth.
Special construction. Other types of drain pipe may
be used to meet unusual construction conditions when approved by the
Town Engineer. Concrete encasement or cradle for the drain may be
required where excessive loads are expected, particularly in shallow
trenches or where subsoil conditions are unsatisfactory.
Manholes and drop inlets. The materials used in the
construction of manholes and drop inlets shall conform to the details
as shown on the Standard Sheets included hereinafter.[1] Connecting pipe between drop inlets shall be a minimum
eight inches diameter and from drop inlet to drain manhole shall be
a minimum 12 inches diameter.
Special structures. Detailed plans for the construction
of sewer lifts, box culverts, headwalls, bridges, erosion control
structures, any necessary special manholes or drop inlets, etc., shall
be submitted to the Town Engineer for his approval prior to construction.
Handling pipe. All pipes and fittings shall be handled
carefully. Pipes and fittings shall not be dumped or dropped while
unloading or during emplacement in the trench.
Stockpiling pipe. The contractor shall take all necessary
precaution to insure the stability of any stockpile or individual
length of pipe that is stored. Pipe stored along a road or sidewalk
shall be placed so that it does not create a safety hazard or impair
the free flow of traffic.
Fitting and cutting pipe. The joint surfaces of all
pipes and fittings shall be clean, and shall fit together to form
a tight joint. When setting pipe the workmanship and tools used shall
be such that the quality and strength of the pipe is not impaired.
Joints. Stormwater drain joints shall be formed by
caulking into the hubs a gasket of jute or oakum and then filling
with mortar composed of equal parts of Portland cement and mortar
sand, or at the contractor's option, a preformed or poured caulking
compound of a type approved by the Town Engineer may be used. Plastic
couplings may be used with asbestos cement pipe.
Drain line and grade. All pipe shall be laid true
to line and grade with bells upstream and shall have a full, firm
and even bearing. Boulders or other natural obstructions shall not
be considered cause for varying from true line and grade.
Trenches. Any suitable excavation methods may be used
but drain trenches shall be confined to the smallest area practical
for proper construction. Hand methods shall be employed where it is
deemed necessary by the Town Engineer to preserve trees or protect
existing structures. All necessary precautions shall be taken when
blasting to confine flying stone or debris and to protect and prevent
damage to adjacent structures. Where necessary, sheeting and/or bracing
shall be used to provide support and stability to the trench walls.
Unless otherwise directed, sheeting and bracing shall be removed as
the trenches are backfilled. For trench compaction specifications
see Section II.2.2 (2).[2]
Spoil. Excavated material unsuitable for backfill
shall be removed from the site of the work as it is excavated. Excavated
material that is to be sued for backfill shall be placed in spoil
banks located on only one side of the trenches or pits and at least
two feet away from the excavation wall. These spoil banks shall be
located where they will not interfere with the work, or contribute
an overload to the wall of the excavation. Where necessary, the excess
material shall be removed to some other place and brought back when
required. No rock shall be placed in the trench. Boulders nine inches
in diameter or under could be placed back in the trench.
Drainage. Necessary precautions shall be taken at
all times to prevent the flooding of adjacent property. Drainage ditches,
necessary relocation of stream channels, or other positive means of
diverting and/or controlling the water shall be employed. No water
shall be drained into a pipe or trench under construction. Water shall
not be allowed to accumulate in the trenches but shall be drained
or pumped away from the work to established drainage channels.
The contractor shall install batter-boards or
parallel string lines prior to laying the pipe. Batter-boards shall
be set at not more than fifty-foot intervals. The pipe shall be set
carefully to line and grade using a grade pole. A string line shall
be set at least 150 feet (over at least three grade stakes) alongside
the trench preceding pipe laying operations to assist the shovel operator
and guard against errors in grade stakes.
At the contractor's option an industrial laser
specifically made for pipe laying operations may be used to establish
line and grade. The contractor shall closely follow all manufacturer's
recommendations with regard to maintaining accuracy. (Normally pipes
may be installed at a distance of no greater than 300 feet from the
laser and fans shall be used to circulate air through the pipe to
maintain a constant temperature.) In any case line and grade shall
be checked every 100 feet using a transit or preestablished grade.
Earth foundation. Where pipe is installed on native earth the trench bottom shall be bedded as specified under Subsection P. Low areas shall be filled with suitable crushed stone. Where rock in either ledge or boulder formation is encountered, it shall be removed below grade and replaced with suitable sand or crushed stone as shown on the construction details at the rear of this book. Where a firm foundation is not encountered at the grade established due to soft, spongy or other unstable soil (unless other special construction methods are called for on the plans), all such unstable soil, under the pipe and for a width of at least one diameter on each side of the pipe, shall be removed and replaced with suitable crushed stone or other approved suitable material properly compacted to provide adequate support for the pipe line.
Bedding, hand backfilling. Storm drains shall be constructed
using crushed stone bedding as shown in the detailed drawings. Additional
earth shall be added and tamped alongside the pipe until the top of
the pipe is reached. Both the pipe tamp and flat-bottomed tamp shall
be used for this operation. When the top of the pipe is reached, an
additional nine inches to 12 inches of earth shall be placed over
the pipe by hand. The material shall be free of stones or rocks. The
hand backfill shall follow closely behind pipe laying to prevent damage
to or movement of the pipe by cave-in of the trench walls.
Backfill. Following the hand operation, backfill may
be machine placed providing extreme care is used. Backfill shall be
made to existing grade and left in a neat and uniform condition. Excess
earth shall be windrowed over the trench area. Where the trench passed
under a ditch, stream, swale, or drainageway, the backfill shall be
left in such a manner as to allow proper drainage as well as to duplicate
conditions as they existed prior to construction. The surface must
be entirely free of lumps of earth, stones and debris. Adjacent roadways
shall be swept clean of all rubbish and flashed with water if necessary.
Shoulders of highways which have been cut shall be carefully shaped
and consolidated by tamping or rolling.
Cradle. Where called for on the plans or as ordered
by the Town Engineer to meet field conditions, pipe shall be installed
on cradles. The Town Engineer will determine at the time of construction
whether a dry or plastic mix will be used at any particular location
depending upon trench conditions. The cradle shall be constructed
of 1:2 to 1/2:5 concrete, using commercial type 1 Portland cement
and clean, hard aggregate. Cradle material shall be placed to the
width shown on the plans, or as ordered by the Town Engineer, and
to an elevation 1/4 up the side of the pipe. The pipe shall be laid
in a channel formed in the material by means of a round-pointed shovel.
High points and low spots shall be corrected and the pipe firmly bedded
to line and grade and jointed. Additional cradle material shall then
be added and tamped along the haunches of the pipe and subsequently
shaped to the top of the pipe as shown on the Detail.[3] A "safety cover" of nine inches to 12 inches of earth shall then be placed and backfill made as required under Subsection Q.
Protection of existing drains. Care shall be taken
at all times to avoid entrance of mud and water to existing drains.
When connecting to an existing manhole, the connection shall be tightly
plugged until completion of the work. At that time, the plug shall
be removed and the accumulated water and mud pumped out of the manhole
under the supervision of the Town Engineer. The cost of any necessary
cleaning or flushing of existing facilities caused by failure to comply
with this specification or for other reasons will be borne by the
developer.
Protection of new work. At the end of each working
day (or any other time of work stoppage), the upstream end of the
pipe shall be tightly plugged to prevent entrance of mud, silt, or
muddy water.
Construction under adverse conditions. No pipe shall
be laid during adverse weather conditions. In no case shall pipe be
laid in water. In cases where drains are being installed in wet conditions
or below the groundwater table so that installed pipes become submerged
overnight, sufficient backfill shall be placed to prevent the pipe
becoming buoyant.
Conflicting pipe lines and other utilities. No existing
pipe line, conduit, cable, pole, guy wire or other utilities or portion
thereof shall be moved without the consent of the agency operating
such utility. Any necessary changes in line and grade of the new pipe
line shall be made only with the consent of the Town and the Town
Engineer.
Lateral connection extending to the street line
shall be put in for each lot. These laterals shall be constructed
with the same care as street drains. The stormwater laterals shall
be six inches diameter and shall be installed on a minimum slope of
1/8 inch per foot. The pipe used for laterals shall have a joint specifically
made to fit the bell on the Y branch of the street drain. Laterals
shall be firmly bedded in crushed stone bedding. They shall be laid
true to line and grade and the bedding material shall be tamped under
the pipe and alongside the haunches to provide full bedding and lateral
support for the entire length of the pipe. The interior of each pipe
shall be cleaned before adding the next length of pipe. Laterals shall
be installed at depths not greater than 10 feet.
The ends of all laterals shall be plugged or
capped to hold pressure while testing, and marked with a two-inch-by-four-inch
witness stake extending from the pipe to a point four feet above the
ground. Paint top of witness stake using following color code:
The developer shall generally maintain his tract in
a neat and nuisance free condition. Cellar excavations and trenches
shall not be left open for prolonged periods or be allowed to fill
with water and thereby create a hazard.
Where open storm drainage ditches or swales are constructed
the side slopes and bottom shall be neatly graded and left in a clean
condition. Side slopes shall be topsoiled, and seeded with perennial
rye grass.
Vacant, unsold lots shall not be used as depositories
for scrap lumber, excess earth, or trash unless such material is covered
with earth and properly graded.