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Stevens CERL aids in beach replenishment project

Melissa Wiegand

Issue date: 2/13/09 Section: Campus News
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Stevens has teamed up with the New York District of the US Army Corps of Engineers and the State of New Jersey to work on a beach replenishment project in Long Branch, New Jersey. According to Dr. Thomas Herrington, associate professor of ocean engineering in the Institute's Department of Civil, Environmental and Ocean Engineering and assistant director of the Center for Maritime Systems, this project is just a small part of "the largest beach replenishment project in the world."
New Jersey began its beach replenishment program in the early 1990's. The program's main goal is to extend the width of all New Jersey beaches by a minimum of 100 feet. The state plans to spend a total of $2 billion in order to keep the beaches at this width for fifty years. This will provide buildings and infrastructure along the beaches with greater protection from the flooding that can occur during extreme weather conditions such as hurricanes. Another benefit of the project is that increasing the width of beaches will help to attract more beachgoers. Since the state makes between 15 and 20 billion dollars annually off of beach tourism, the cost of the project is worthwhile.
The stretch of beach in Long Branch that Stevens is currently focusing on was first replenished in 1995. Unfortunately, the replenished beach did not respond as well to erosion as a natural beach would have. Many local surfers have also complained that the man-made shorelines have an adverse affect on surfing conditions. The straight-line shape and steeper drop-off of the new shorelines prevent waves from breaking before hitting the shore. These complaints led the state Department of Environmental Protection to ask researchers at Stevens to develop an experimental sand placement design for the replenishment project.
The project staff at Stevens includes Dr. Thomas Herrington, Professor Jon Miller, three graduate students, and several undergraduate and work-study students. The research group at the Institute's Coastal Engineering Research Lab (CERL)decided to change the shape of the beach by creating a "feeder beach" which protrudes about 700 feet offshore. At this distance from shore, the US Army Corps will have to fill an area submerged in about 25 feet of seawater with sand. The researchers hope that the proposed shape of the beach will allow waves to begin breaking at the outermost point of the feeder beach and roll along the side of it until they reach the main beach, thus improving surfing conditions and preventing rapid erosion of the main beach from a direct assault of waves.
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