THE
TRUTH ABOUT MONOPOLE
FOUNDATIONS; TWO-HUNDRED
HOLES LATER
There is nothing scarier than
digging your first monopole
foundation. An augur pulls up
and starts drilling a hole in
the earth about five feet in
diameter, and you have no idea
what’s down there. Here are some
ideas on what you’ll hit, and
what it may mean.
Utility Lines
I’m hoping that you never forget
to call to get all underground
utilities located. Hitting a
utility can be a very expensive
problem. Or, in the case of
fiber-optic phone cable, it can
easily bankrupt even a moderate
size company. Before you ever
dig, call the one-call center
for underground utilities in
your market, as well as city
hall to see if there are any
minor utility lines that
one-call does not have in their
system.
I’m sorry to say that I have hit
almost every utility over the
years except fiber-optic cable
and natural gas. Even if you get
the utilities marked by the
utility company, they often miss
the target and you can still hit
them while drilling. You often
also hit utility lines that are
really abandoned, but they scare
you to death until you realized
they are de-activated.
It’s always a good idea to stand
by the edge of the hole you are
drilling and look down it each
time the augur pulls the drill
out to throw the dirt off. You
will see any utility line you
have hit, or any water or other
item gushing into the hole. Not
that you can do much about it,
but it makes you feel good when
you’ve reached the bottom and
not hit anything. If you are
going to hit a utility line,
except for a main transmission
line, you will hit it in the
first six feet or so. Since most
monopole foundations require
drilling to 15 feet or so, the
pressure is off after about 1/3
of the way down.
If you hit a utility line, do
not panic. First determine if
the line is still an active
line. Over the years, there have
been millions of lines laid that
have been replaced with newer,
bigger ones. A 1930s water line
has probably been replaced with
a new, bigger one in the 1970s.
If you hit a line and it is bone
dry, it’s a good bet that it is
no longer in service. If you hit
a utility line and stuff starts
pouring out, then stop digging
and call the utility company. If
you hit anything but fiber optic
phone cable, then you will
survive the hit, even though you
are going to get yelled at. As
long as you had the utilities
mark their lines, and you do not
dig where they marked, you
should be O.K. on liability.
There are several utility lines
that can cause extreme damage or
death if you hit them, and you
must be extra careful when
digging near them. The first is
natural gas. If you hit a
natural gas line, it is very
likely that it will kill the guy
digging the hole, and the
resulting fireball may burn down
half the block. If you see gas
meters in a line, and you are
digging in that straight line
between meters, then you need to
double check your line locate.
The same is true with
underground electricity. If
there is any question in your
mind that you are clear, then
don’t dig until you are 100%
sure. Also look for small
warning signs that may be on
poles in the vicinity that you
are digging that say “warning
–underground gas line”. Even
though you may be held innocent
in the trial because you had the
utilities marked, causing a
major explosion and fire will
tie you up in court for years,
and certainly put an end to your
billboard project.
Water
Even if you don’t hit a water
line, your hole may start
filling with water during, or
after, the digging has
commenced. This can be the
result of high levels of water
in the soil, or an underground
aquifer. Most drilling companies
can handle this problem – but at
an extra, significant cost. They
put a steel pipe down the hole
as they dig it, a process called
“casing” the hole. This keeps
the sides of the hole from
collapsing. The water itself
will not harm the drilling
machine. But you can’t drill in
mud unless there is pressure on
the sides to contain it.
In minor cases of water, a
simple solution is to order
custom-crete, as opposed to
concrete, to fill the hole after
you put the sign’s column in.
You can order this dry, and the
water in the hole mixes with the
concrete and soaks it up. This
process works really well in the
right application, but requires
an experienced concrete guy to
monitor the mix and the amount
of water. When you consider the
fact that they build bridge
piers under water, you can see
that your project is not that
big a challenge.
Occasionally, the sides of the
hole will collapse near the
bottom of the hole, due to water
seeping in. This normally has no
negative impact on the
foundation, as long as the depth
does not change. You just pour
the concrete anyway.
Effectively, you have a bigger
foundation now, shaped like a
bell. Some consider this a
better foundation, since you
can’t really ever pull it out of
the ground.
Rock
Rock is very scary, because you
can feel the cost of
construction skyrocket when rock
is struck while digging. Again,
don’t panic until you get the
facts together. Sometimes, the
“rock” is an old concrete slab,
which can be knocked out in a
few minutes with a jack-hammer.
Other times, the rock is a
boulder, which can be pulled
out. And some rock is fairly
soft, like limestone, and
digging, while slower, can
continue along just fine
(although they are still going
to bill you extra for it). The
worst rock to hit is just that –
solid rock. It requires a
special rock cutting blade on
the augur, and very
time-consuming methods of
drilling tiny coring holes, and
then expanding them. How much
more will it add to your
project? Many thousands of
dollars. It all depends on how
far down you got before you hit
rock, and far you have to dig to
hit bottom.
If you are terribly concerned
with the possibility of rock,
you can ask neighbors who have
built buildings and fences if
they hit any. Or you can hire a
soil sample to be done, to
determine if there is rock and,
if so, how deep it is under the
surface. These test are
expensive, so I would consider
them a last resort, unless the
economics of the sign are so
marginial that you would not
want to build it it rock is
present.
Other Items
There really is not much of
interest in the hole normally. I
always hoped for buried
treasure, but never found
anything of monetary value,
unless you recycle old aluminum
cans. I also never came across
an ancient Indian burial ground,
or Tutankhaman III. So the
things I’ve already described
pretty much sum it up.
Conclusion
Digging a hole is filled with
uncertainty. But as long as you
have had all the utility lines
located, there is not much more
you can proactively do except to
stay close by and watch. If you
see any evidence of utilities
being present, even if you had a
line locate performed, hold up
on drilling until you get a
second opinion. Unless you are
scrambling to build the sign
before the permit runs out,
there is no reason you can’t
wait one more day.
And if you hit anything, don’t
panic (with the exception of
fiber-optic phone cable, in
which case you should just pack
your bag and head for Mexico)
until you get the facts. There
is nothing out there that has
not been hit before, and there
are a million quick fixes to
every eventuality.
So it will all be O.K. Dig it?
About the Author:
Frank Rolfe is the author
of the book...
Big Bucks From Big Signs and
is preparing for the first ever
OutdoorBillboard.com Bootcamp in October.
Rolfe started his
billboard empire from his coffee table, as a
fresh graduate from Stanford University. It
began as a resume builder for graduate school
applications, and ended with a sale to a public
company 14 years later.
Using unique strategies he developed from
desperate competition with much larger
adversaries, Rolfe eventually owned more
billboard units than any private individual in
Dallas/Ft. Worth. Along the way, he fine-tuned
the techniques to find billboard locations, rent
advertising space, and sell signs and leases.