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To keep a road or rail line straight and/or flat, and where the comparative cost or practicality of alternate solutions (such as diversion) is prohibitive, the land over which the road or rail line will travel is built up to form an embankment. An embankment is therefore in some sense the opposite of a cutting, and embankments are often constructed using material obtained from a cutting. Alternatively the term fill is used to denote an embankment.

Embankments should be constructed using suitable materials to provide adequate support to the formation and long-term stability.

[edit] History

The term cutting appears in the 19th century literature to designate rock cuts developed to moderate grades of rail lines.[1]

[edit] See also

Examples of transportation embankments include:

  • Chelsea Embankment a path and roadway in London also serves to contain the River Thames
  • Harsimus Stem Embankment remains of a railway built by the Pennsylvania Railroad in Jersey City, New Jersey, United States

[edit] References

  1. ^ Alexander Smith (1875) A new history of Aberdeenshire





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