Western North Carolina's mountain corridors—I-40 through Pigeon River Gorge, US-19/23 approaching the Great Smokies, and the Blue Ridge escarpment—produce severe landslide conditions in saprolite, colluvial deposits, and weathered metamorphic formations. Hurricane Helene in September 2024 triggered over 1,000 documented landslides across the region, generating the largest single FHWA emergency relief allocation in history—$1.15 billion to NCDOT alone. GeoStabilization International deploys soil nailing, slope pinning, and engineered drainage solutions across western North Carolina's highest-priority corridors.
Our design/build model delivers post-Helene landslide repairs at emergency speed—one team designs, builds, and warranties every stabilization under FHWA ER-ready procurement.
Western North Carolina has experienced catastrophic landslide damage—amplified dramatically by Hurricane Helene in September 2024. Over 1,000 documented landslides across the region destroyed highways, bridges, homes, and utilities. NCDOT received $1.15 billion in FHWA emergency relief funding—the largest single allocation in program history. I-40 through Pigeon River Gorge, US-19/23 approaching the Great Smokies, and Blue Ridge escarpment corridors face ongoing instability in saturated saprolite, ancient landslide deposits, and weathered metamorphic formations.
GeoStabilization International is actively supporting western North Carolina's post-Helene landslide recovery. Our design/build approach delivers slope stabilization at emergency speed—soil nail walls, ground anchor systems, and engineered drainage installed under FHWA Quick Release and ERFO procurement mechanisms. Our team understands federal emergency relief processes because we have executed ER-funded geotechnical projects across disaster zones for over two decades.
Post-disaster landslide repair must address the failure mechanism permanently—not just clear debris and reopen the road. GeoStabilization International engineers every western NC slope repair to resist the next Helene-scale event, incorporating site-specific hydrology, updated soil parameters from post-event investigation, and reinforcement designs that account for the elevated groundwater conditions that Helene-saturated terrain now presents.
GeoStabilization International has executed FHWA emergency relief-funded geotechnical projects across multiple disaster zones over two decades. We understand Quick Release fund activation, ERFO procurement pathways, IDIQ task order vehicles, and the design/build delivery model that FHWA increasingly favors for emergency geotechnical work. North Carolina's post-Helene recovery demands contractors who can execute at ER speed—and that starts with understanding the procurement mechanisms. 8,000+ projects of execution experience stands behind every NC slope repair.
From Hurricane Helene to other FHWA ER events, see what agencies say about GeoStabilization International's emergency response capability.
Post-Helene recovery demands FHWA ER-ready contractors. GeoStabilization International's design/build teams are actively stabilizing western NC slopes. Join the recovery effort.