
Hillside Ocean Outfall, City of North Myrtle Beach, South Carolina
The existing Hillside Drive roadway was raised 3 to 4 feet above existing grade to
A municipal senior project manager, Eric has provided professional services in the field of civil engineering since 1982. He has worked extensively on water and sewer designs for the City of Myrtle Beach and other local governments using both traditional and computer-aided design tools. Eric has been involved in large-scale water, wastewater, and stormwater management studies, including rate collection inventory, capacity analysis for water, gravity sewer, pump stations and force main networks for analysis of seasonal peaks, off-season, and future planning of the City of Myrtle Beach. He also has a great deal of experience in retrofitting existing infrastructure systems to bring them into conformance with area growth, current industry standards, and to improve overall efficiency. Eric serves as a civil engineering practice area leader at Bolton & Menk and guides others through his extensive expertise.

The existing Hillside Drive roadway was raised 3 to 4 feet above existing grade to

The project consisted of on-shore and off-shore design of a single 84-inch diameter gravity feed

A 207,500-square-foot multi-purpose natural turf recreation field was constructed along with a 10-foot multi-purpose sidewalk.

Bolton & Menk provided the preliminary drainage studies and associated reports pertaining to this 156-acre
Gravity Ocean Stormwater Outfalls are an innovative, tested, and effective alternative to discharging stormwater compared