Sandbag
Sandbag
Sandbag
Disclaimer: This document provides information that may be insufficient in addressing all your
concerns about sandbag dike construction. We suggest you contact your local municipal authorities for
additional information and guidance.
o Keep heavy weights below shoulder height, above knees and close to the body.
Limit reaching with arms when passing the sandbags.
o Pivot feet and do not twist through the back while handling sandbags.
o Do not throw sandbags.
FILLING SANDBAGS
• Fill sandbag to half its capacity (no more than 40 lbs) with sand, clay or silt.
• Fold or tie the flap (tying or sewing is not necessary).
• Do not drag the bags (this could cause lower back injury and bag to weaken).
• When forming a line to pass sandbags, face each other and stand no more than one
to two feet apart. If there are not enough people to form a continuous line, use a
wheelbarrow to move sandbags.
o To create a more secure dike, when possible, create a trench in the soil that is
one sandbag deep by two sandbags wide.
• Construction:
o Dike size:
• Height: Sandbag dikes require at least two feet of freeboard. Freeboard is the
area of the dike between the highest floodwater level and the top of the dike:
predicted floodwater rise above ground level + two feet of freeboard
= required dike height
For example, if floodwater is predicted to rise four feet above ground level,
the required dike height is at least six feet. (4’ + 2’ of freeboard = 6’ high dike)
Sandbag dikes will compact when they get wet, which can reduce the
available freeboard. The amount of compaction due to wetting increases with
the size of the dike. Add at least five per cent to the required height of the
dike to account for compaction. For example, add three to four inches for a
six foot dike to account for compaction due to wetting.
• Width: The base of a sandbag dike is two feet wider than it’s required height:
height + two feet = width at base
For example, a dike with a required height of six feet would have to be eight
feet at its base. (6’ + 2’ = 8’ wide at base)
• Sandbag dikes must be at least two feet wide across the top of dike.
• Due to the high pressure water can exert, consult your local authority for
additional advice for dikes higher than six feet.
o Polyethylene sheets
• Proper use and placement of polyethylene sheets is important to reduce the
rate of water seeping through the dike. Use six mil polyethylene in three meter
wide rolls on the river side of the dike. Have the polyethylene sheet protrude
over the ground on the river side of the dike. Be careful not to puncture the
polyethylene sheet. (The polyethylene sheet will be weaved between the
courses of sandbags.)
• Drop the bags into place and tamp bags with feet to lodge them into place.
• Offset the bags from the previous row in the same course to form a brick
pattern.
• Change direction of bag from parallel to perpendicular to the river for each
course of bags.
• Every second course of sandbags should be set back a quarter (1/4) of a
sandbag width, both on the river side and the land side of the dike, producing
a step-like appearance.
• Weave the polyethylene sheet between the courses of sandbags as to have at
least two layers of sandbags protecting the polyethylene sheet from debris
punctures. Maximum depth of the polyethylene sheet should be three
sandbags or a quarter (1/4) of the cross section of the dike, whichever is less.
o No matter how well you build a dike, extreme water pressure may cause water
to seep through the dike or bubble up through the ground. It is advisable to have
pumps with sufficient fuel and oil readily available to last the duration of the flood
event and an escape plan.