Artificial Headlands
Artificial Headlands
Artificial Headlands
Small rock headland schemes can be implemented without specialist assistance, but
normally the services of a competent coastal consultant and contractors are required.
As with all rock structures on the shoreline the rock size, face slopes, crest elevation and
crest width must be designed with care. Randomly dumped rock with a high void to
solid ratio is hydraulically more efficient than placed and packed rock. However, rock
structures on recreational beaches should be built with a view to minimizing the
potential for accidents involving beach users slipping between rocks.
Headlands should be built just seaward of the dune toe, rather than as a revetment.
Increasing the distance down the beach will allow the protected dunes to retain some
of their natural dynamics and appearance, and will create a more embayed shoreline,
with wave energy being dissipated over a longer frontage. However if the distance is
too great the structure may be outflanked, effectively forming a detached breakwater
and allowing the protected dune face to be subject to erosion once more.
The length of the structure must be sufficient to protect the backshore assets at risk
while adjacent dunes continue to be eroded. The structure ends must return to the
eroding face, and may need extending from time to time to prevent outflanking.
These end extensions can often be lower than the main structure face as they will be
subject to less wave attack. By keeping the crests low there will be a greater
opportunity for wind blown sand to reach the dune face.
IMPACT
Even though this form of defence is intended to give only partial protection to the
dunes the impacts on shoreline processes and landscape will still be high, and may
be unacceptable in environmentally sensitive areas. Erosion may well continue
along the unprotected frontages, and, without ongoing management, the
structures may be outflanked allowing erosion of the protected frontage as well.
On frontages affected by longshore transport the headlands may reduce drift rates,
resulting in the erosion of downdrift stretches of coast, but helping to stabilise the
updrift shore. As with all fixed dune defences, the headlands will interfere with the
natural dynamic interchange of material between beach and dune. They will also
influence the longshore transfer of sand, modify dune habitats, disrupt the natural
landform and potentially result in localised dune face scour at their terminal ends.
PRACTICE AND ENVIRONMENTAL
OPPORTUNITIES
Headlands can provide good protection to discrete points along the shoreline,
either temporarily or over longer periods. They can also be used to transform a
length of eroding dunes into a shoreline of small bays and headlands, in which part
of the dune system is maintained as a dynamic system, while other lengths are
artificially fixed. The width of the upper beach in the centre of the embayments
may increase, providing improved recreation. The dune faces in the lee of the
headlands may redevelop as blown sand can pass around the structures.
Temporary structures can be removed when no longer required, with little lasting
damage to the dune system as a whole. Sandbags structures are the easiest to
remove, but rock structures can also be taken away for re-use elsewhere.