Is your inflatable dam
reaching the end of its life?
Aging Inflatable Dams Increase Operational Risk
Many inflatable dam systems are reaching the end of their service life. Loss of OEM support (including Bridgestone installations), material fatigue, UV degradation, and limited spare parts can quickly turn aging infrastructure into operational risk.
We help dam owners evaluate, modernize, and replace aging inflatable dam systems to restore reliability, maintain compliance, and ensure long-term operational continuity.
We understand the whole system, Not just the rubber
Replacing an aging inflatable dam requires precise evaluation, engineered adaptation to existing structures, and carefully managed implementation. Our approach is structured to reduce uncertainty at every stage.
DIAGNOSTIC & ANALYSIS
Comprehensive technical evaluation of the existing membrane, anchoring systems, civil interface, and control components. Objective: determine structural condition, remaining service life, and viable intervention options.
CUSTOM ENGINEERING
Project-specific membrane and anchoring design adapted to existing foundations and hydraulic constraints. Focus on compatibility, performance optimization, and long-term durability.
EFFICIENT INSTALLATION
Structured implementation planning aligned with operational and seasonal constraints. Phased execution strategies designed to minimize downtime and maintain water management stability.
ONGOING SUPPORT & MONITORING
Post-installation guidance, technical validation, and lifecycle support to ensure sustained performance and predictable maintenance.
REPAIR OR REPLACE?
Making the right long-term decision
- Escalating maintenance costs
- Small recurring interventions often mask increasing structural degradation.
- OEM support limitations
- When original manufacturers discontinue support, spare parts and technical validation become uncertain.
- Material aging
- UV exposure, cyclic inflation stress, temperature variation — these do not reverse.
- Lifecycle economics
- Compare: Continued patching VS Planned, engineered replacement