Tuesday 26 June 2012

sentosa breakwater

Two new breakwaters have been built at Siloso beach, on the southwest shore of Sentosa island. They will serve to protect the beach there, as erosion has been accelerated by the wash from the high-speed ferries plying between the nearby World Trade Centre and the Riau islands of Indonesia. At almost a kilometre in length, Siloso beach is the longest of three artificial beaches built at a cost of $20 million in 1991. The new breakwaters cost more than $1 million. They are each eighty metres long and are placed about a hundred metres offshore.
Breakwaters are only needed at Siloso Beach and along the East Coast Park because elsewhere in
Singapore, longshore drift is negligible.
How is the Breakwaters form:
The breakwaters may be small structures, made of granites and placed one to three hundred feet offshore in relatively shallow water, designed to protect a gently sloping beach
When oncoming waves hit these breakwaters, their erosive power is concentrated on these
structures some distance away from the coast. In this way, there is an area of slack water behind
the breakwaters, which thus will reduce erosion.
Limitations of the Breakwaters:
When the breakwaters deflect the incoming waves before they reach the shore, these
waves that are deflected to other places (exposed areas of the coast) causing erosion.
Breakwaters are unable to provide complete protection for the whole coast and therefore
unprotected areas will prone to erosion.

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