US Pipelining, LLC., an emerging leader in Cured-In-Place-Pipelining (CIPP), and trenchless lining solutions recently completed a federal project which included epoxy pipelining rehabilitation at the William J. Nealon Federal Building, and United States Courthouse for the Middle District of Pennsylvania.
Located in Scranton, Pennsylvania, it is the city’s first federally owned building. Originally erected in 1894 as a federal post office, the building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2018.
Continue reading Our Use of Epoxy Pipelining Rehabilitation at the Historic William J. Nealon Federal Building →
The over-the-hole installation of 10-ft diameter CIPP liner is among the largest to have been successfully completed anywhere. Requiring more than a year of planning, sourcing, and logistics, the project involved support from the nation’s premier suppliers to the industry.
“As projects go, this was one of the more challenging with which we’ve been involved,” said Bill Moore, AOC product leader-CIPP resins. “Our team was engaged from day one as we worked through the selection and formulation of the resin in order to meet both environmental and engineering specifications. The sheer size of the liners being installed required six tankers carrying over 240,000 lbs of resin to be transported to the base from our plant in Canada. The logistics and delivery of material was a critical component.”



In 2016 the Shell Oil refinery facility located in Anacortes Washington was experiencing failure in a 36” diameter transmission line. This steel pipe was installed more than 30 years ago. It ran process crude oil from one holding tank to another. The 36” steel pipe ran 1,600 feet from one tank to another and had a working pressure of 80 psi. Due to the fact, that the facility was built on an island off the coast of Washington state made it difficult logistically to get all of the necessary equipment there to install the pipe lining material. 