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GIS Engineers see a lot...

 

 

Out in the field, you never know what to expect.

Not too long ago we received a field assignment to review a few handholes that we couldn’t locate from satellite imagery – three handholes to be exact. The project area was in the eastern part of Madison, WI along I-90. Knowing that we had to pop open a few handholes, I needed to find some help to lift those heavy things.

I tapped our most seasoned intern, Austin, to assist. The first handhole we found ended up having its own little ecosystem hiding inside:

handhole

See them? Look closely...

The second handhole had its own surprise in-store. It wasn’t actually a handhole, but rather an exposed manhole:

manhole

We searched for the third handhole, but could not locate it. We noticed an orange marker post off in the distance. After walking up to the orange post, we still didn’t see the handhole the marker is supposed to highlight. Then I noticed a piece of barbed wire sticking out of the ground. 

I yanked and yanked on the barbed wire and discovered the wire was anchored to something. It was wired to the handhole grip and the handhole was camouflaged with mud. The last person to open that handhole used barbed wire to lift it.

muddy ground

 

Like we said: Out in the field, you never know what to expect.

Contact us at Millennium Geospatial to avoid some of these nightmare mistakes.

Taylor McMaster is an Engineering Manager at Millennium Geospatial.
Austin West is a Geospatial Engineer in the MGS Intern Program.

Taylor McMaster and Austin West

"We had a project with very unique engineering requirements. We engaged with Millennium Geospatial to produce a complete design with detailed construction drawings. His team was great to work with."  See what our clients say about us.

Tim Rout

Tim Rout AccessParks

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