S-Curve Swimming Pool

Started by grimss, May 21, 2009, 10:24:15 AM

grimss

Anyone else notice that the huge road project along the St. Johns S-curve is creating some, umm, unintended consequences?  From what I understand, one of the issues it was meant to address is drainage, but watching the construction, it seemed to me the road was being rerouted to funnel every ounce of water onto the inside of the s-curve and into the yard of the poor dude who lives there. Now that we've had so much rain, it looks like me fears are coming true. It has been impassable for the last two days--the poor guy literally has a "no wake" zone by his front door-and the road was closed this morning for being underwater.  It must be at least a foot deep.

Any of you infrastructure folks know what's going on, and how they can possibly fix this??

BridgeTroll

Where or what exactly is the "S curve"?
In a boat at sea one of the men began to bore a hole in the bottom of the boat. On being remonstrating with, he answered, "I am only boring under my own seat." "Yes," said his companions, "but when the sea rushes in we shall all be drowned with you."

Shwaz

I believe grimms is talking about the stretch of St. Johns Ave. just south of the Avondale strip leading to Herschel.
And though I long to embrace, I will not replace my priorities: humour, opinion, a sense of compassion, creativity and a distaste for fashion.

BridgeTroll

Ah ok... this storm is a good stress test for hurricane season.
In a boat at sea one of the men began to bore a hole in the bottom of the boat. On being remonstrating with, he answered, "I am only boring under my own seat." "Yes," said his companions, "but when the sea rushes in we shall all be drowned with you."

reednavy

They're currently replacing the water lines after it fractured last year. You could clearly see the water seeping out and flowing while you were driving. At the same time, they're going to improve the storm drains. However, when the St. Johns has risen, as is the case, there is nothing that can be done. Several days of NE to E wind flow, coupled with tremendous amounts of rain from here to that part of the river in Brevard County, this will last for several more days. The river backs up into the drains and the water has nowhere to go but up. This issue isn't just there, but San Marco, Riverside, Mandarin, etc, any part of town close to the river has this happen.
Jacksonville: We're not vertically challenged, just horizontally gifted!

grimss

I know all about rain water and rising water with nowhere to go--it's got my backyard buried at the moment. But all these factors together have never created this sort of issue before in this particular spot--I've lived around the corner from the s-curve since '95.  I'm no engineer, but it's apparent that whatever they've done has directed runoff to a new place--this guy's yard. When you drive past it, water can be clearly seen flowing down Montgomery to his front door; it's also actually crossing the road right above his house to join the flow coming down St. Johns. It appeared yesterday that they'd put one of those felt rolls on the road about 15 feet up from his house in an attempt to draw the flow into one of the new strorm drains there; without the roll, the water appears to bypass that particular storm drain altogether, which would seem to be a design problem . . .

My question is, since it appears they're almost done (storm basins in, paving done, curbs rebuilt, driveways poured), what's not working?

reednavy

Doesn't help it being you posted around high tide either.
Jacksonville: We're not vertically challenged, just horizontally gifted!

Deuce

Did the guy post critical comments about a church on a blog? :)

grimss

Okay, so now the road is passable and the sewer drains seems clear of water, but this guy's still got a lake in his yard.  The workers have put a hydraulic pump in it and are running the hose down the road toward the creek--where one imagines the water was supposed to go in the first place. Is this something he's going to have to do every time we get a big storm?  Don't know the guy, but the situation does seem to suck . . .

mtraininjax

And, that $115 will save Jacksonville from financial ruin. - Mayor John Peyton

"This is a game-changer. This is what I mean when I say taking Jacksonville to the next level."
-Mayor Alvin Brown on new video boards at Everbank Field

downtownparks

Mtrain, is your solution to everything, just accept it?

Steve


The Compound

Quote from: mtraininjax on May 21, 2009, 10:30:56 PM
You could move.....

Yes! Its so easy to sell your property and move these days. Great idea!  Imma leave them a note, they probably havent thought of that.

ChriswUfGator

Quote from: The Compound on May 21, 2009, 11:53:30 PM
Quote from: mtraininjax on May 21, 2009, 10:30:56 PM
You could move.....

Yes! Its so easy to sell your property and move these days. Great idea!  Imma leave them a note, they probably havent thought of that.

Hey, now that their house is underwater, you could probably get a good deal on it...hehehehe


Captain Zissou

I am staying down in Gainesville this week because my home in Jax is inaccessible. I live on the west bank of the Ortega River. My family has had to stay with friends for the past two nights.