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CAPABILITY | CIVIL & STRUCTURAL ENGINEERING

Asbestos-Cement Pipe in Water Distribution Systems

Asbestos Cement Stack Pipe Water

Plan to replace at-risk asbestos-cement pipes

When an asbestos-cement pipe (also known as Transite pipe) corrodes, it leaches calcium, softens, and loses mechanical strength, effectively reducing its service life. Ä¢¹½tv engineers and scientists help water agencies develop strategic, cost-effective asbestos-cement pipe replacement plans customized to the unique challenges of each municipality's distribution systems.

Assess and address asbestos-cement pipe challenges.

Thousands of miles of asbestos-cement pipes installed in U.S. water distribution systems may be nearing the end of their useful service lives depending on their condition and working environment. Ä¢¹½tv addresses failure risks, including pipe corrosion and aging, by conducting asbestos-cement pipe condition assessments to determine remaining life and develop replacement plans for distribution systems. 

Ä¢¹½tv's assessments of water distribution systems begin with collecting system data and performing system-wide sampling, condition assessment, and laboratory testing. This includes noting prevalent asbestos-cement pipe failure mechanisms, analyzing historical pipe leak records by geographic location in the distribution system, and identifying factors affecting pipe failure propensity. Laboratory testing involves residual strength testing, extent of degradation evaluation, and assessing O-ring condition (i.e., hardness testing).

Our engineers continue the procedure by developing a service life prediction model, which can be based on historical leak rates or pipe degradation rates. Finally, we develop a master replacement plan based on the system-wide remaining service life prediction model. This incorporates hydraulic, operational, and financial considerations; critical customers; seismic risk; optimal feasible replacement length; and other factors.