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Switzerland's intent
to force road vehicles onto the railroads will relegate the
1913 Lötschberg Alpine rail tunnel, built with pneumatic
drills and hand shovels, to a secondary role. Crews building
the 34.8-kilometer route that will supersede it now utilize
jumbos and tunnel boring machines. But uncertain, variable
geology that led to numerous fatalities on the old tunnel
still taunts crews on the new one today.
Geotechnical surveys had predicted
the existence of rubble-filled pockets, or karsts, that could
drain rivers up to 2 km above into the tunnel. "What
we didn't know was whether the karsts actually existed,"
says Peter Hufschmied, a director with the project's co-designer
Emch+ Berger A.G., Bern. Having taken two months this spring
to cross just 25 m of karstic rock, engineers are now prepared
for a potentially slow slog through the remaining 3 km of
similar ground. But so far, progress has been good.
Tunneling bids fell within a few
percentage points of the total $2.2-billion budget, and have
deviated little the last two years. The project so far is
on schedule and budget, says Peter Teuscher, director of BLS
AlpTransit A.G. (BLSA), Thun, the sponsor. As tunneling approaches
60% completion, BLSA is reviewing bids for railroad equipment.
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| DANGEROUS
DEPTHS Jumbos and TBM's drill into uncertain ground conditions
in same area as original 1913 tunnel. (Photo courtesy
of BLSA) |
DANGEROUS
DEPTHS. Jumbos and TBM's drill into uncertain ground
conditions in same area as original 1913 tunnel. (Photo courtesy
of BLSA) The new tunnel received voter support in plebiscites
during the 1990s as part of a policy to promote railroad investments
to mitigate environmental impacts of growing transit truck
traffic. Crossing the Bernese Alps, the Lötschberg will
smooth the route from Italy to France. Also launched as part
of that strategy was the 57-km Gotthard tunnel, located about
100 km further east to serve German-Italian connections.
Excessive costs predicted for
the tunnel projects forced planners to shelve some of the
other Gotthard-related tunnels, says Teuscher. Tunneling,
now beginning on Gotthard itself, is due to end in around
12 years. But the location of the north portal has yet be
to determined. On the twin-tube Lötschberg, only part
of the west bore is under construction. Much of that bore
will be left unequipped for now.
Connecting Frutigen to Raron,
the Lötschberg includes twin bores, except for the northern
few kilometers of the west tube. To function initially with
a single track, the Lötschberg will use a trial tunnel
built five years ago 80 m to one side as the escape route
in that stretch. Elsewhere, escape passages will link the
two main tubes every 330 m.
At BLSA, Teuscher heads 26 people,
relying on outside firms to design, manage and supervise work.
Designers even provide templates for treating different ground
conditions, such as specifying rock-bolt lengths, says Hufschmied.
His firm is handling all design, along with Ingenieurunternehmung
Bern A.G. preparing. Lötschberg's route came from a "spaghetti
plan" of options, says Hufschmied. Selection criteria
included picking a route of known geology. Some 20 deep cores
formed the basis of the designers' knowledge, helping to calibrate
a "general geological understanding [that] is based on
an extrapolation from the surface, adjusted by data from the
(1913) tunnel," he adds.
Anticipating difficult conditions
in the north, engineers ordered construction of the 9.6-km-long
trial tunnel to probe the rock. With its data, the north drive
from the Mitholz access tunnel poses few uncertainties. But
in the lesser- known twin south drives, engineers suspect
the existence of karsts with water pressurized up to 75 bars.
To find them, work halts every three to four weeks for drillers
to probe 250 m ahead.
The SATCO joint venture has the biggest share of drilling
and blasting. Led by Austria's Strabag A.G., Vienna, and including
Paris-based Vinci Group, Stockholm-based Skanska International
and two local firms, SATCO signed a roughly $360-million contract
in early 2000 for the northern tubes.
Drill/blast is used for all current
tunneling from a point about 10 km from the south portals.
With its use of bolts, mesh and sprayed concrete in amounts
depending on conditions, the technique would be recognized
as the New Austrian Tunneling Method. But the Swiss engineers
eschew that term. Tunnels due to carry traffic in this phase
will be concrete-lined, and the rest will be left with a sprayed
covering.
In 72 months, SATCO must
drive about 8 km of a single tube north of the Mitholz access
to Frutigen. To the south, it will build two 8.7-km tubes
until it meets the oncoming joint venture's drill/blast teams.
Led by Paris-based Bouygues S.A., that joint venture is driving
Lötschberg's central tubes from the Ferden access. Click
here to view map
Working three daily shifts,
SATCO is advancing each face at an average of 10 m per day,
says project manager Wolfgang Lehner. He is pleased with that
rate, considering his teams must travel 2 km underground just
to reach the tunnel. "We have chosen sophisticated equipment
to provide high productivity," says Lehner. Hanging the
entire jumbo backup from the tunnel roof is the most obvious
innovation. "We thought it was necessary to get something
like a TBM backup working in drill and blast to minimize handling
time with the installations," he explains.
Most backup equipment follows
the faces hanging from the ceiling. High-level conveyors remove
spoil without disruption of activities below. Dump trucks
take rock from the faces some 60 m back to a mobile crusher
feeding the conveyors. The conveyors are emptied into a holding
cavern leading to other removal conveyors, in order to isolate
rock disposal from surface snags.
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KICKING
OFF Northern portal excavation has just began.
(Photo by Peter Reina for ENR) |
TUNNEL DUO.
Tunnel boring machines are used only for some 18 km
of tubes at the south end. Two machines are driving the eastern
main tube from Raron and part of the west drive from the side
at Steg. But the MaTrans joint venture in that area decided
drill/blast would cost less than using a TBM for the short
4.9 km of the west tube. Led by the Swiss Marti Tunnelbau
A.G., Bern, MaTrans includes London-based Balfour Beatty Group
Ltd.; Germany's Walter Group, Augsburg; and A. Porr A.G.,
Vienna.
Offered as two contracts, MaTrans
first won the Steg section in November 1999. It then secured
a combined deal worth about $335 million, including the Raron
tunnel, six months later. "A soon as the group got a
letter of intent for Steg, our strategy was clearly to go
for Raron as well, with a variation for the whole project,"
says project manager François Bertholet.
Using two 9.4-m-dia Herrenknecht
TBMs, MaTrans set off from the Steg portal in October 2000,
and its Raron machine followed the next July, say Bertholet.
For a 150-m stretch of the Raron tube a half kilometer from
the portal, MaTrans used drill/blast in Trias rock, which
was too weak for TBMs, says Rolf Dubach, the drill/blast manager.
Crews dug from the west tube to gain access.
TBM progress reached a record
41.8 m in one 18-hour stretch this June, but the average is
closer to 17.5 m, says Bertholet. But abrasive, blocky rock
has held back the Steg machine by some six weeks.
At the north end, local contractors
are building cut-and-cover sections ramping to the surface.
One of them has begun excavating a 100-m section of tunnel
to meet the SATCO crews. Its workers are drilling a canopy
of steel tubes to support the tunnel roof as they dig short
sections beneath.
Excavation, accounting for more
than 40% of the total cost, is going well enough for an anticipated
completion date of 2007. Commercial operations could begin
that December, in line with general timetable changes. But
if good progress continues, trains could start the December
before. Asked which date is more likely, Teuscher is guarded.
"Ask me at the end of 2004," he says.
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