Case Histories

(Inlet Relocation)  (Reservoir Clean-up)


Inlet Relocation
In New Hanover County, North Carolina, the Mason Inlet, which separated Figure Eight Island from Wrightsville Beach, had migrated over a half-mile south and threatened property on Wrightsville Beach, only a thin line of sandbags and tubes holding the inlet back from Shell Island Resort.

Objectives:
relocate the inlet to its previous location, 3,000 feet to the north.
improve water quality via increased flushing of the Intracoastal Waterway and other inland waters;
provide sand to renourish the 10,000 feet of Figure Eight Beach recreation area.

Obstacles:
Dredging could only be done between November 15 and March 31, a deadline set by the Army Corps of Engineers to protect nesting sea turtles. Southwind Construction was able to begin construction December 27, 2001.

Operations & Results:
Southwind first erected 7-foot sand “geotubes” on a sand spit for a 700- by 250-foot stockpile area to hold 260,000 cubic yards of sand. This sand was dredged from the New Mason Inlet and would be used to fill in the old inlet.
A second dredge sprayed sand from the new inlet channel directly onto Figure Eight Island’s beach to rebuild 10,000 feet of eroded beach
By mid-March, two "plugs" were removed; one “plug” between the Atlantic Ocean and Mason Creek, the other “plug” between Mason Creek and the Intracoastal Waterway. This formed the New Mason Inlet.
March 20, Southwind bulldozed sand from the stockpile area into the old inlet, filling the channel.
Project successfully completed March 31