Help | Contact Us
NukeWorker Menu

Hanford proposes “decoupled” approach to remediating former chem lab

Started by Marlin, Jun 16, 2025, 09:31

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Marlin


Mounder

Long story short: mostly chemical-free building with no legacy radiological history wants to be torn down by some little 8A contractor with only industrial safety controls. Easy quick job. Subsurface radiological contamination found from unrelated adjacent site, screws up contract plans.
Solution: knock it down to the slab and deal with soil contamination later.

Marlin

Quote from: Mounder on Jun 16, 2025, 12:37Long story short: mostly chemical-free building with no legacy radiological history wants to be torn down by some little 8A contractor with only industrial safety controls. Easy quick job. Subsurface radiological contamination found from unrelated adjacent site, screws up contract plans.
Solution: knock it down to the slab and deal with soil contamination later.

Demolition operations were postponed in 2010 after workers detected significant radionuclide contamination in the soil under the building's B Cell. Radioactive solutions are thought to have seeped through a hole in a sump liner and into the ground through an expansion joint in the concrete floor. According to a CPCCo report, radiological measurements approaching 13,000 R/hr were detected approximately seven feet under the expansion joints.


NukeWorker ™ is a registered trademark of NukeWorker.com ™, LLC © 1996-2025 All rights reserved.
All material on this Web Site, including text, photographs, graphics, code and/or software, are protected by international copyright/trademark laws and treaties. Unauthorized use is not permitted. You may not modify, copy, reproduce, republish, upload, post, transmit or distribute, in any manner, the material on this web site or any portion of it. Doing so will result in severe civil and criminal penalties, and will be prosecuted to the maximum extent possible under the law.
Privacy Statement | Terms of Use | Code of Conduct | Spam Policy | Advertising Info | Contact Us | Forum Rules | Password Problem?