Arcadian Shores is a section of South Carolina’s Grand Strand between North Myrtle Beach and Myrtle Beach. It is home to Hilton Hotel Resort, Kingston Plantation, and several major residential towers. While the cities immediately north and south are part of a 50-year federal beach nourishment project, Arcadian Shores is not included. However, Horry County, which has jurisdiction over Arcadian Shores, with funding assistance from the state of South Carolina, has taken the initiative to maintain and improve the beach.
Ten years ago, Horry County was able to “piggyback” the first nourishment of Arcadian Shores as the contractor was completing the project at Myrtle Beach. With a scheduled renourishment of Myrtle Beach and North Myrtle Beach by the Corps of Engineers in 2008, an opportunity presented itself for renourishment of Arcadian Shores. The challenge was obtaining permits on relatively short notice and accomplishing the project within a narrow environmental window.
From start to finish in 11 months
Horry County retained CSE on 23 April 2007 to prepare the design, secure permits, issue plans to contractors, and oversee construction. On 30 March 2008, the last of the equipment was removed from the beach and the 6,000-foot-long project was ready for the tourist season. Going from initial planning to project completion in less than a year is the sort of challenge CSE has faced many times. The keys to this project’s success included:
- Timely condition surveys and sand budgets for the area by CSE staff.
- Identification of a new borrow area drawing on work by the US Geological Survey, Coastal Carolina University scientists, as well as our staff field team.
- Timely review and issuance of permits by state and federal officials.
- Efficient execution of construction by the contractor, Great Lakes Dredge & Dock Company, operating under an exceedingly narrow environmental window for hopper dredging.
Project Summary
The $4 million Arcadian Shores project placed ~316,000 cubic yards between Singleton Swash and the Apache Campground Pier. The new beach added nearly 200 feet of width and included realignment of the swash to mitigate downcoast erosion.
Construction was via two hopper dredges, Dodge Island and Padre Island, using a recently discovered deposit 1-3 miles offshore of the project area. Building on a reconnaissance survey by Coastal Carolina University, CSE obtained 56 borings using our in-house coring system and confirmed sediment quality to below-operational depths. The high density of cores allowed us to select dredging corridors having the most compatible sediments for the beach while avoiding cultural resources, hard bottom, and ongoing monitoring by state resource agencies.
Hopper Dredge Advantages & Disadvantages
Prior studies along the central Grand Strand of South Carolina indicated that the best sand tends to be found in isolated thin sheets overlying an ancient offshore erosional surface. Such deposits are best suited for hopper dredges which excavate by sweeping thin layers off the bottom. Natural resource officials in the Carolinas generally favor hopper dredges because they tend to leave undisturbed areas for “recruitment” of benthic organisms. Hopper dredges cut narrow, shallow furrows rather than broad, deep holes in the bottom. The latter sometimes infill with finer material, thus changing the bottom characteristics.
The environmental advantages of shallow cuts via hopper dredge are offset by disadvantages during construction. Hopper dredges pose more of a threat to sea turtles than cutterhead dredges. As a result, work is severely restricted to just a handful of cold-water months under federal regulations. For Arcadian Shores, the allowable construction window was January through 31 March.
Close Timing for the Project’s Completion
CSE’s project team, led by Bill Forman and Doug Dusini, worked closely with county staff to secure permits just in time for winter construction. While the last permit reviews were in progress, CSE prepared final plans and bid packages for the project. As an example of extraordinary timing and coordinating, the following schedule was met.
1 February 2008 | Plans available to contractors |
28 February 2008 | State permit issued |
7 March 2008 | Contract issued |
6 March 2008 | Federal permit issued |
11 March 2008 | Construction starts |
28 March 2008 | Construction ends |
31 March 2008 | Environmental window for construction ends |
While such close timing is not CSE’s favored way of accomplishing projects, we are confident all the beach users and property owners along Arcadian Shores are happy at the outcome. With a much wider beach in place, they are less vulnerable to storms and the new beach can accommodate many more beach goers than before.
Performance Prediction
People ask how long the new beach will last? CSE predicts “well over ten years” based on the relatively low erosion rates along South Carolina’s Grand Strand and the experience after the initial nourishment in 1998. At the start of the 2008 project, there were 40-60 feet of storm berm remaining from the first project. So the first nourishment gave a head start to the second, ten years later. This trend is being repeated at other Grand Strand beaches under the federal 50-year project. Renourishment at ~10 year intervals is not only replacing eroded sand, it is widening the beach even further, keeping seawalls buried, and allowing a buffer of dunes to soften the shoreline between the ocean and developed property.
Acknowledgments
Owner: Horry County SC (c/o Steven Gosnell, Director, Public Works)
Engineer: CSE Columbia SC (c/o Bill Forman Jr., PE, Doug Dusini, Philip McKee, Trey Hair, and Dr. Tim Kana)
Contractor: Great Lakes Dredges & Dock Company (c/o Steve Auernhamer)