Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Soil found to ‘slump’ near Heritage Division building in LR

- RACHEL HERZOG

A slow-moving landslide has been discovered near the state Division of Heritage headquarte­rs, Parks, Heritage and Tourism Secretary Stacy Hurst told employees Monday.

Hurst said the “slump” north of the parking lot was first discovered by Theo Witsell, the chief of research and inventory for the Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission, on May 19, according to the email obtained by the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette on Tuesday.

The department building, at North Street and LaHarpe Boulevard, sits atop a steep slope that leads down to the Arkansas River.

Hurst said the department has engaged experts including the Arkansas Geological Survey, the building architect and a geotechnic­al engineerin­g firm, and profession­als will be on site to conduct tests this week.

She said the department will “contract immediatel­y with the geotechnic­al engineerin­g firm to fully assess the situation and recommend a plan for mitigation.”

“The slide does present a danger to the lawn area and, potentiall­y, the parking lot,” Hurst said in the email.

Mike Hood, manager of Little Rock’s civil engineerin­g division, went to the department headquarte­rs Monday to look at the ground near the parking lot and said the sinking area had settled down about a foot. He told the Democrat-Gazette on Tuesday that the situation “has not shown itself to be immediatel­y catastroph­ic,” and that he and others were monitoring it.

The slope is near part of the Arkansas River Trail. That section isn’t connected to the main part of the trail, so there’s not much traffic, Hood said, though there are some walkers who use it.

The department blocked

off the most northern row of parking spaces as a precaution­ary measure and to remove some weight, Hurst said.

The Division of Heritage — when it was the Department of Arkansas Heritage, before state government was reorganize­d in 2019 — announced plans to build its headquarte­rs at North Street in 2014. The building was completed in 2016 and also houses the Arkansas Arts Council, the Arkansas Historic Preservati­on Program and the Arkansas Natural Heritage Commission.

In her email, Hurst said a geotechnic­al investigat­ion was done in 2014 before the building and parking lot were constructe­d.

“Measures were taken in the planning and design to ensure safe constructi­on. For example, the building itself is on drilled piers that go down to bedrock,” she wrote.

When the new building and parking lot were being constructe­d, the demolition of a warehouse uncovered remnants of the foundation of an 1890s trolley barn beneath the parking lot, according to an opinion column Hurst wrote for the Democrat-Gazette in 2017. Hurst said the department fully documented the streetcar site.

Hood said the slide at the department headquarte­rs is similar to one that occurred about a decade ago between City Hall and the Union Pacific Railroad tracks after heavy rain and flooding on the Arkansas River.

“We have been aware that there’s problems with the river since 2011,” he said.

A study that the city commission­ed a few years ago found “that there’s a lot of loose, unstable soil in that area,” Hood said.

Part of that area is in an easement that the city purchased, but the upper section is state property, Hood said.

The city has been planning to execute a project to refill the slope with better material and obtained a $2 million grant from the Federal Lands Access Program to do so, but it has yet to obtain a permit allowing it to proceed from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.

“We’ve got to fix it someday,” he said.

 ?? (Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) ?? A “slump” in the grass is shown Monday outside the Division of Arkansas Heritage headquarte­rs in Little Rock.
(Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/Stephen Swofford) A “slump” in the grass is shown Monday outside the Division of Arkansas Heritage headquarte­rs in Little Rock.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States