
Date: Thursday, February 27
Time: 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
Location: University Club of the University of Alberta 11435 Saskatchewan Dr, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G9
Cost: Free for Members | $20 for Non-Members**
Join us for an educational luncheon on the project background, design and tendering, and installation of ARROW Utilities’s 1350 mm diameter concrete sewer pipe.
ARROW Utilities (formerly Alberta Capital Region Wastewater Commission) identified 3.2 km of 1350 mm diameter concrete sewer pipe in need of repair or replacement. CIPP lining was selected as the rehabilitation method. The pipe alignment runs through an environmentally sensitive area and is close proximity to residences in other areas. The project was planned to minimize liner installations. A unique process, over the hole wetout (OTHW) was required to accommodate the overweight liners. For this process, the tube is transported to site dry, where a mobile wet out facility is constructed. This is one of few OTH installations in Western Canada.
This presentation describes the project background, design and tendering, and installation with the OTH system.
Presenter: Gregory Germain and George Bontus
Greg is a Municipal Engineer with more than twelve years of experience, specializing in water and wastewater projects. His areas of expertise include analysis and
documentation of design, preparation of contract drawings, and contract specifications and construction administration. He conducts field reviews for structural and civil installations, liaisons with contractors and reviews contractor submittals. Greg is responsible for administering progress meetings, and providing progress updates to clients and stakeholders.
George Bontus, P.Eng. is Director of Engineering with Insituform Technologies Limited. George is involved in all aspects of pressure pipe lining including marketing, design, estimating, and project managing installations throughout North America. He is responsible for design and reviews for CIPP liners in gravity and pressure pipe applications across Canada.
George is active in AWWA as a member or chair in several committees and is currently Chair of NASTT NW Chapter. He has delivered papers and courses relating to trenchless technology for over 20 years, and is currently an approved Instructor for the NASTT CIPP Good Practices Course. George is a participant on several NASSCO committees including the Inserted Hose Standards committees.
He is currently a registered professional engineer in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Nova Scotia.

Date: Thursday, January 23
Time: 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
Location: University Club of the University of Alberta 11435 Saskatchewan Dr, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G9
Cost: Free for Members | $20 for Non-Members**
Join us for an educational luncheon on the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, constructed between 2019 and 2024.
The Trans Mountain Expansion Project, constructed between 2019 and 2024, incorporated over 550 trenchless crossings in varying terrain from central Alberta to British Columbia’s lower mainland. While most of the major crossings were completed using one-pass methodologies such as horizontal directional drills, two-pass microtunneling was used in select locations to tackle some unique challenges on the project. This presentation will cover several completed two-pass tunnels for high pressure pipelines ranging in length from ~120 m to 240 m in a wide range of geological and hydrogeological conditions, while crossing highways, railways, and environmentally sensitive areas.
Presenter: Jake Fei, EIT and Project Coordinator, Stantec
Jake is a Civil EIT and project coordinator with Stantec’s water conveyance group in Edmonton helping clients deliver multi-disciplinary projects. Jake specializes in trenchless design and construction for new installations and rehabilitation projects across Canada and the United States. He dedicated over three years of his career to the Trans Mountain Expansion Project, gaining a wealth of knowledge in trenchless construction where he helped to coordinate and conduct design review of over 50 major and 50 minor trenchless crossings.”

The Calgary Section of the Northwest Chapter is currently accepting abstracts through January 15, 2025 for their Trenchless Technology Symposium taking place in Calgary, AB on June 2-3, 2025. Case studies showcasing local trenchless projects either in the planning phase or as completed with lessons learned, and presentations on locally available trenchless products and methods, or trenchless research and innovation will be accepted. Examples include:
- New Trenchless technologies
- New local availability of Trenchless Technologies
- Inspection, leak detection and asset management
- Optimization of detection and monitoring programs
- Rehabilitation methods
- Case studies of local projects
- Regulatory framework and upcoming standards
- Other topics
Please submit your 250-word abstract using the link below by Wednesday, January 15th, 2025. Final presentations to be 20-25 min. in length on a provided template. No papers will be required.

Date: Thursday, November 28
Time: 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
Location: Danish Canadian Club | Tivoli Room
727 11 Ave SW Calgary, AB T2R 0E3
Cost: Free for Members | $20** for Non-Members
Join the NASTT Calgary Chapter for a luncheon on Strategies for Investigating Subsurface Challenges and Evaluating Geotechnical Risk for Complex Crossings.
Through the review of three case studies, this presentation will describe multiple best practices to consider when customizing a geotechnical investigation program, evaluating trenchless methodology feasibility and communicating project risk for complex trenchless crossings. A horizontal directional drill case study examines a crossing with significant elevation difference that crossed protected land parcels a highway and a sensitive river containing thick gravel deposits below the river that extended to the exit at the valley uplands. This urban microtunneling case study handles swelling shales with bentonite and coal seams containing buried glacial valley gravel deposits and a curved microtunnel for a railway crossing evaluates feasibility of several trenchless technologies through a risk assessment of challenging subsurface conditions comprising till with frequent cobbles and boulders having high strength and abrasivity.
About the speakers:
Lawrence Onwude is a civil and geotechnical engineer with Stantec Construction Ltn. with over 14 years of experience as a project and construction trenchless engineer. Lawrence has overseen over 60 major trenchless crossings and more than 400 conventional trenchless crossings, specializing in horizontal directional drilling, direct steerable pipe thrusting, microtunneling, and conventional techniques such as auger bores, pipe rams, down-the-hole hammers, and horizontal directional bores based on geohazard assessments for projects across western Canada.
Carrie Murray is a geotechnical trenchless leader with Stantec Construction Ltn. with over 25 years’ experience specializing in feasibility and risk assessment, design and construction of complex crossings using horizontal directional drilling (HDD), direct steerable pipe thrusting (DSPT), microtunneling, pipe jacking, auger bore and pipe ramming methods having completed hundreds of trenchless crossing projects.

Date: Thursday, November 28
Time: 11:30 AM – 1:30 PM
Location: University Club of the University of Alberta 11435 Saskatchewan Dr, Edmonton, AB T6G 2G9
Cost: Free for Members | $20 for Non-Members**
Join us for an educational luncheon on the Mill Creek combined sewer trunk, which conveys wastewater and rainwater from south Edmonton to the Gold Bar Wastewater Treatment Plant, built in 1958.
The Mill Creek combined sewer trunk, which conveys wastewater and rainwater from south Edmonton to the Gold Bar Wastewater Treatment Plant, was built in 1958. The service area for this trunk is about 8,200 Ha plus the Nisku & Leduc areas. According to the Multi-Sensor Inspection (MSI) in 2018 and the concept study, the physical condition of the trunk is poor and very poor, especially the section found in Mill Creek Ravine. This trunk was determined to be a high priority rehabilitation project. The main scope includes 890m of 2100mm diameter new tunnel with two shafts, 200m of local sewer reconnection, and abandonment of 860m of existing trunk.
The first phase of the project construction was a micro tunnel which began in March 2023 and was successfully completed in June 2024. This included the construction of a secant pile working shaft next to the Mill Creek School playground, a liner plate retrieval shaft within Tubby Bateman Park, and an HDPE lined 2100mm inside diameter (ID) reinforced concrete jacking pipe installed by micro tunnel boring machine (MTBM).
Presenter: Gary Fei, P.Eng. M. Eng. Project Manager from EPCOR Water Services
Gary has been working with City of Edmonton and EPCOR for more than 17 years. He has involved in the design, construction and project management for many projects, including the tunnel installations, trunk rehab, sewer rehab and upgrading, and other drainage related projects.