Rockfall Mitigation in Vermont

Rockfall Mitigation in Vermont

Engineered rockfall mitigation across Vermont — I-89 Berlin corridor, Smugglers Notch VT-108, US and state highway rock cuts statewide. Rock bolts, barrier systems, rope access scaling, and design-build delivery for VTrans corridors.

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Rock scaling operation at Seminoe Dam

Falling Rock Closes Vermont Highways

Vermont's highways traverse some of the most geologically challenging terrain in New England — and the rock cuts that were blasted through it decades ago are deteriorating. A preliminary VTrans field survey identified over 3,600 rock cuts greater than five feet in height on Vermont's Interstate, US, and state highways. Of those, 10 percent were rated elevated hazard and 2 percent significant — meaning rockfall is possible or likely to reach the travel lanes. The consequences are documented. A 2012 rockfall on I-89 in Berlin closed northbound lanes for two days and required hand scaling by a specialty contractor to clear the slope. VT-108 through Smugglers Notch sees recurring rockfall events from the schist formations above the highway, where large blocks of metamorphic rock bounce and roll onto the roadway after release.

The geology driving these events is consistent across Vermont's Green Mountains and Piedmont: metamorphic rock — schist, gneiss, quartzite, phyllite — cut by foliation planes, joints, and faults that Vermont's harsh northern climate progressively opens. Each freeze-thaw cycle infiltrates water into fractures, expands them, and moves blocks incrementally toward release. Many of Vermont's rock cuts were constructed using uncontrolled blasting techniques that left slopes uneven and structurally compromised from the start.

Geohazard Mitigation in Vermont

Rockfall on Vermont Highway?

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How GSI Mitigates Vermont Rockfall

Rock Bolt Stabilization

Rock bolts mechanically pin identified unstable blocks to competent rock behind them — preventing release before it occurs. On Vermont's foliated metamorphic rock cuts, where schist and phyllite layers dip toward the road and individual blocks are bounded by foliation planes and crossing joint sets, targeted rock bolt programs can arrest the progressive failure mechanism before blocks reach the trajectory zone.

GeoStabilization International's engineers map discontinuity orientations and block geometry at each Vermont site before specifying a single bolt — matching bolt length, pattern, and anchorage type to the actual failure mechanics at your corridor.

  • Pattern bolting for zones of distributed instability across entire rock faces
  • Spot bolting for individually identified unstable blocks
  • Fully grouted anchors for permanent stabilization in Vermont's weathered metamorphic rock
  • Torque-tested installation verification at every bolt location

Attenuator and Barrier Systems

Where source area treatment alone cannot eliminate rockfall risk — particularly on Vermont's steeper slopes where block volume and velocity exceed what bolting can address — GeoStabilization International designs interception systems calibrated to the site. Every barrier specification is driven by 3D trajectory modeling using Vermont's specific slope geometry and rock block characteristics, not generic catalog ratings.

  • Flexible ring-net barriers for high-energy impact zones
  • Attenuator fences positioned in trajectory paths to decelerate falling rock
  • Hybrid draped mesh systems that contain rockfall against the slope face
  • Catchment ditch optimization using trajectory simulation

Rope Access Scaling and Hazard Removal

Precision removal of loose and marginally stable rock eliminates the source material before it releases. On Vermont's vertical and near-vertical rock faces — particularly along steep highway cuts and mountain corridor routes like Smugglers Notch — GeoStabilization International's SPRAT- and IRATA-certified Rockfall Remediation Technicians work from industrial rope access, removing hazards from terrain where no conventional equipment can safely operate.

Vermont Rockfall Mitigation Process

From initial assessment through verified performance, GSI delivers Vermont rockfall mitigation solutions in five coordinated steps.

Step 1

Rock Mass Assessment

GSI engineers evaluate site conditions, hazard severity, and infrastructure exposure to determine investigation scope and design approach for your Vermont project.

Step 2

Trajectory Modeling

In-house engineers and geologists conduct detailed investigation of the specific conditions along Vermont's I-89 Montpelier corridor driving the rockfall mitigation hazard at your site.

Step 3

Protection Design

Custom rock bolts solution designed by the same engineering team who investigated the site—under one VTrans-ready contract.

Step 4

Field Installation

Specialized crews deploy purpose-built equipment across Vermont's I-89 Montpelier corridor, executing the engineered solution under direct engineering supervision.

Warranty

Project documentation meeting VTrans standards. Performance warranty covering the installed rockfall mitigation solution.

Warranty

Project documentation meeting VTrans standards. Performance warranty covering the installed rockfall mitigation solution.

Draped mesh rockfall protection field installation

Why Vermont Selects GSI for Rockfall Protection

Site-specific rock mass characterization. Vermont's metamorphic geology — schist, gneiss, phyllite — behaves differently from sedimentary or volcanic rock. Our geologists map foliation dip, joint orientation, and weathering profiles before engineers specify a single bolt or barrier.

Rope access and SPIDER excavator capability. We install on vertical faces without road closures or access road construction — keeping Vermont's corridors operational during protection work.

3D trajectory simulation. Every barrier specification is driven by modeled block trajectories calibrated to Vermont's slope geometry — not catalog ratings from unrelated formations.

VTrans specification compliance. Documentation meets state standards from first submittal through construction closeout.

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Client Reviews

Rockfall Mitigation in Virginia

I wish I had been smart enough to let you design the rock mitigation. You and your team turned in an excellent performance. The work ethic of your team impressed everyone on our side of the table. Most companies print a slogan on their company clothing. However, your folks demonstrated every hour that they “Work Hard or Go Home”. You sent us a world class construction team – thanks!

Organized and Dependable Crew Support in Vermont

You and Chris are awesome to work with! … Your crews that have been here are all very well organized, dependable and get their work done! GSI should be very proud of the crews they have working for them. Thanks again Perry for all your help and assistance!

Rockfall Mitigation Support for Mining Operations

As told by GSI Rockfall Division Director: “I am at the [mine] now and the truck with the equipment from the warehouse just arrived. Environmental issues are extremely important in the mine so any equipment arriving on site has to be pressure washed and cleaned. Although they ask this of every contractor that arrives on site, they always seem to have to do a secondary washing here with their own people (just the way it always seems to turn out). Our people at the warehouse did such an awesome job of cleaning and taking the client’s concern to heart that they do not have to do a secondary cleaning and complimented us for such a great job.

Don't Wait for the Next Closure

VTrans has identified hundreds of elevated and significant hazard slopes statewide — and Vermont's freeze-thaw cycles keep deteriorating them. Engineered protection before the next release costs far less than emergency cleanup after it. Request a rockfall assessment to get started.

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