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Deep cement mixing (DCM) is a geotechnical engineering deep foundation ground improvement technique where a binder material, typically cement, is injected into the ground for ground stabilisation and land reclamation. The technique can also be used for containing contaminants and water cut-off. [1]
DCM textiles, formerly Delhi Cloth & General Mills; DCM Ventures, a venture capital company; Digital Cinema Media, an advertising company; NTT DoCoMo (NYSE symbol), a mobile phone operator in Japan; Doll Capital Management, a US venture capital firm which funded SandForce, BitTorrent and others
In 2007, in Burnaby, a contractor working on a sewage project for the city of Burnaby ruptured a pipeline, causing spillage of 224–234 m 3 (1,410–1,470 bbl) of crude oil. Some of it flowed into Burrard Inlet via the Burnaby storm sewer system. Most of it was recovered.
The Burnaby Refinery is an oil refinery located in the city of Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada owned by Parkland Fuel Corp. The facility refines crude and synthetic oil into gasoline , diesel , jet fuels , asphalts , heating fuels , heavy fuel oils , butanes , and propane .
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. ... Burnaby Central is a future federal electoral district in British Columbia, Canada.
The Burnaby City Council is the governing body for the City of Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. The council consists of the mayor and eight elected city councillors representing the city as a whole. [ 1 ]
Urban researcher and economist R. W. Archer credited the Baltimore Regional Planning Council (BRPC) for coining the term "metrotown" in 1962. [8] The BRPC envisioned metrotowns as "cohesive urban developments... deployed radially and in a series of rings around the City of Baltimore", each accommodating 100,000 to 200,000 people and at greater densities than what was then common in suburban areas.
Big Bend is flat and to the north borders the more rugged South Slope neighbourhood of Burnaby. Due to its unique geography and proximity to the Fraser River it remains a flood risk; in December 2014, 100 millimeters of rain flooded parts of Big Bend, although the City of Burnaby's dike system and other anti-flood measures mitigated the damage.