Levees

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East Bank Overview


The Lake Pontchartrain and Vicinity (LPV) system is a frontline hurricane risk reduction system that extends from the East Bank of St. Charles to southern St. Bernard Parish and ties into the Mississippi River Levee system at both ends. In St. Charles Parish, the LPV starts at the Bonnet Carre Spillway with the Bayou Trepagnier Complex floodwall tie in and extends through the West Return Wall, providing protection for Norco, New Sarpy, Destrehan and St. Rose.

The West Shore Lake Pontchartrain (WSLP) system will provide risk reduction measures to address tropical/hurricane storm surge events in St. John the Baptist and St. Charles Parishes.

Upon completion of the West Shore Lake Pontchartrain levee, the East Bank of St. Charles Parish will receive protection from both the existing Lake Pontchartrain and Vicinity system and the proposed West Shore Lake Pontchartrain system. Both are federal hurricane protection systems. St. Charles Parish and the Pontchartrain Levee District (PLD) are responsible for maintenance and upkeep of the portions of these systems in St. Charles Parish as construction is completed.

 

100-Year Hurricane Protection


The St. Charles Parish 100-Year Hurricane Protection project enlarged and raised the existing LPV levee system to a designed 100-year level of protection against a Category 3 hurricane.

 East Bank Levee Map

The levee system, located north of Airline Highway, is oriented in an east-west direction and separates the developed areas in St. Charles Parish from the approximately 26,000 acres of wetlands on the north (or flood) side of the levee, known as the LaBranche Wetlands.

On the levee system’s eastern limit, the levee transitions into the Jefferson/St. Charles Parish Return Levee just south of the east-west runway extension of the Louis Armstrong International Airport. Generally the levee parallels Airline Highway to where, at the levee system’s western limits, it traverses around the Shell Oil company tank farm and transitions into the east guide levee of the Bonnet Carre’ Spillway.

This hurricane protection project includes approximately 9.75 miles of earthen levee, five drainage structures, two swing gates, two pre-cast concrete access bridges and a floodwall under Interstate 310.

 

Drainage Features


In addition to the upgrades to the LPV system, PLD and St. Charles Parish have partnered with state agencies and private funding sources to increase interior drainage capacity on the East Bank of St. Charles Parish.

The Bayou Trepagnier Pump Station, located in Norco, was completed in 2004 and is capable of pumping up to 850 cubic feet per second. The Cross Bayou Pump Station, located in Destrehan and completed in 2011, was a partnership amongst the Louisiana Department of Transportation and Development, Pontchartrain Levee District, Motiva, Shell and St. Charles Parish government to provide flood protection and storm water drainage on the East Bank of St. Charles Parish. The Cross Bayou Pump Station is a 100-year interior drainage capacity station, capable of pumping up to 1,300 cubic feet per second.

Other East Bank external, temporary pump stations are:

  • Almedia Structure
  • Prescott
  • Walker Structure

There are currently plans for two new pump stations on the East Bank – one in Montz and the other in St. Rose.

 

West Shore Lake Pontchartrain


In response to flooding on the East Bank of St. Charles, St. John the Baptist and St. James Parishes following events such as Hurricane Isaac – during which I-10 remained submerged and impassible for a number of days – the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers fast-tracked an existing study to evaluate the possibility of building a hurricane protection system on the West Shore of Lake Pontchartrain.

West Shore Levee Map

The Hurricane and Storm Risk Reduction System for the West Shore of Lake Pontchartrain, completed in August 2013, recommended construction of an 18-mile levee with four pump stations. The levee would begin at the west guide levee of the Bonnet Carré Spillway, extend to Hope Canal, then head south toward the Mississippi River Levee. The proposed West Shore levee will protect the communities of Montz, LaPlace, Reserve and Garyville. The project was awarded funding in July 2018.

 

Westbank Overview


The West Bank of St. Charles Parish is subject to heavy rainfall events, tidal surges from the Gulf of Mexico and other hurricane-related flooding which result in damages to industrial, commercial, residential, agricultural and environmental facilities. This unprotected area has been declared a federal disaster area 14 times in the last 30 years due to named storm events.

Levee Map

St. Charles Parish, in cooperation with the Lafourche Basin Levee District, has undertaken plans to construct the West Bank Levee Initiative, a multi-phase project composed of a 33-mile flood protection system spanning from the Davis Diversion West Guide Levee in Luling to a natural high-elevation ridge at Highway 308 in Lafourche Parish. The West Bank Hurricane Protection Levee in St. Charles Parish connects a large gap in the hurricane protection system spanning from the Sunset Drainage District Levee to the Davis Pond Freshwater Diversion West Guide Levee.

The West Bank Levee Initiative’s long-term objective is to construct a flood protection system achieve 100-year level of protection by building a system to a +12.5-foot elevation. The interim goal is to provide protection to a +7-foot elevation to significantly reduce flood risk for a large portion of Southeast Louisiana that is currently vulnerable.

Earthen levees can be raised with future lifts to maintain and improve risk reduction levels without having to remove the already constructed levee.

 

The West Bank Levee Initiative


The West Bank Levee Initiative is divided into the following reaches:

  • Davis Pond Freshwater Diversion West Guide Levee (Luling)
  • Willowridge Reach (Luling)
  • Ellington Reach (Luling and Boutte)
  • Magnolia Ridge Reach (Boutte)
  • Sunset Reach (Paradis, Bayou Gauche and Des Allemands)
  • Bayou Des Allemands Flood Gate
  • Highway 90 Levee (Lafourche Parish)

 West Bank Levee

Upon completion, the project will offer flood protection to more than 25,000 residents on the West Bank of St. Charles in addition to numerous business and industrial sites along the river, including energy and petrochemical producers. 

 

Alternative Alignments


The Louisiana Coastal Protection and Restoration Authority (CPRA) is evaluating two alternative alignments for additional Hurricane Protection in Southeast Louisiana.

Des Allemands Flood Gate Alignment

The first alignment is the Highway 90 alignment that St. Charles Parish and the Lafourche Basin Levee District are pursuing and hope to have included in the State’s Coastal Master Plan.

The Highway 90 alignment follows the natural ridge along LA 308 to the proposed Highway 90 Levee in Lafourche Parish before tying into Sunset Drainage District Levee at the proposed Bayou Des Allemands Flood Gate.

This alignment would protect a large portion of Southeast Louisiana that is currently vulnerable as well as protect Highway 90, a critical evacuation route for southeast Louisiana.

Northern Alignment

The second alignment that CPRA is evaluating is the Northern Alignment. This alignment extends from the St. Charles Parish West Bank Hurricane Protection Levee at the Sunset Drainage District Levee and runs north along the BNSF Railroad and Old Spanish Trail in St. Charles Parish to LA 3127 and ties into high ground near the Mississippi River. This alignment leaves significantly more communities vulnerable to flooding caused by hurricane and tropical storm events.

By working with the Lafourche Basin Levee District, St. Charles Parish is pushing to have its preferred alignment that includes the Davis Pond West Guide Levee, the Magnolia Ridge, Ellington and Willowrdige Levees, and the Sunset Levee – along with the proposed Highway 90 Levee in Lafourche – incorporated into an overall alignment adopted by the CPRA as part of the state’s Coastal Master Plan.

 

Maps and Documents