Periodic flooding
of Kuala Lumpurs commercial center has dampened Malaysias
ambitions for its capital to become a major international
city. But by building a 9.7-kilometer- long water diversion
tunnel, and putting a two-deck highway inside, local contractors
are working to alleviate monsoon floods while showing a talent
for novel engineering and smart financing. Click
here to view map
Included as an afterthought, the
unprecedented 3-km-long contractor-financed highway component
is subsid-izing the $525-million Stormwater Management and
Road Tunnel (SMART) project, bringing it within the governments
means. On two levels, the road portion will run through roughly
the central third of the tunnel.
Having sold the dual-purpose concept,
the local joint venture, Syarikat Mengurus Air Banjir &
Terowong Sdn. Bhd (SMART JV), had to garner missing skills
to drive the 13.2-meter-dia bore through difficult karstic
limestone. With $200 million of tunneling reportedly going
well, SMART JVs technical gamble seems to have paid
off. Whether it profits from its cash investment remains to
be seen.
A radical cure for Kuala Lumpur's
flooding became increasingly necessary as traditional mitigation
measures became overwhelmed in recent years. As the city grew,
river channels no longer could contain the water. Serious
flash floods hit central Kuala Lumpur three times in 2001
and once two years later.
A key constraint to continuing
channel enlarging is at the confluence of the Gombak and Klang
rivers in the city center, where a profusion of buildings
limit mitigation work. Further downstream, a low mass-transit
bridge over the Klang poses a further obstacle.
Aware of the pressing need to deal
with floods, SMART JV proposed building a water diversion
tunnel from the Klang River, starting above the city center,
and discharging in the south. The team drew on technical support
from a joint venture of local design firm Sepakat Setia Perunding
(Sdn) Bhd. with the U.K.s Mott MacDonald Group, London,
the subsequent projects joint designers.
SIVALINGAM
"When we put forward our tunnel
concept, the government was not in favor of spending $525
million and requested a cheaper solution," says Param
Sivalingam, SMART JVs general manager. The joint ventures
solution in 2002 was to reduce the governments outlay
by incorporating a road tunnel, which the contractor would
finance.
Attracted by the idea, the Dept.
of Irrigation and Drainage invited rival concepts. But the
mixed-use tunnel option won "on the basis of technical
strength and the financial proposals," says Sivalingam.
There was no formal bidding for the contract, but "it
was a matter of competing solutions," he says. After
about six months of negotiations, the contract was signed
in summer 2004. Flooding during that period "helped crystallize
the thinking," he adds.
Junction.
Contractor had to haul TBM through huge open pit excavated
to accommodate highway connection. photo courtesy of SMART
JV
Under the innovative deal, SMART
JV raised about $155 million, including its own equity, to
finance the highway element, says Sivalingam. It will recover
that investment through car tolls during the contracts
40-year duration. The joint venture also raised state-guaranteed
loans for the governments contribution.
Most of the time the 11.8-m-internal-dia
tunnel will be entirely dry. But several times a year, during
moderate storms, water will be diverted into the lowest gallery,
while traffic continues running in the two levels above. In
worse conditions, perhaps annually, traffic will be excluded
and water gates in shafts sealing the roads ends will
be opened to move water. After about two days to clean up
and deal with any damage, the road will reopen.
In full floods, water will be diverted
at up to 290 cu m per sec from the Klang River and fed via
a holding pond in the Gombak district into the tunnel. It
will flow down the tunnels general 1:800 slope for storage
at an upgraded old mining pond in Taman Desa, at the south
end. From there, it will be released through a 500-m-long
twin box culvert into the Kerayong River. Apart from diverting
floods, the system can store 3 million cu m of water.
Conventionally, the tunnel will
have galleries linking the two decks as emergency exits. But
novel features are needed for the tunnels flood relief
function. Ventilation equipment, for example, will be above
water level at four ventilation
shafts, with air flowing through nozzles in the tunnel sides.
Click here to view diagram
In addition to water barriers at
the vent shaft and escape galleries, there will be major gates
at the tunnel ends. Normally, vertical gates in the highway
tunnel upstream and downstream of the ramps will be closed.
A third, standby gate also will be fitted at each end. Flap
gates rising from the road deck will stop traffic at the tunnel
entrances.
The roadways structure also
is unusual "in that it is subjected to upwards and downward
loads," says Arthur Darby, Mott MacDonalds divisional
director. The road structure consists of two reinforced concrete
decks cast integrally with side walls. Fixed to the tunnel
by shear connectors, the box applies only vertical load on
the bolted segmental lining. But because of the upward water
pressure from the filling tunnel, the box itself will undergo
bending moments in slab and walls.
When the gates open, water will
enter from both ends, creating a transient upward pressure
on decks, says Darby. To establish optimal balance between
gate opening rates and structural loadings, BHR Group Ltd.,
Cranfield, U.K., ran surge analyses for the designers, he
adds.
To keep the boring machines
supplied along the tunnel base while the roadway is being
built, the lower deck was raised, allowing for a 2.8-m invert,
but limiting headroom above. Because the construction program
is very tight, "they need to construct the lower deck
while the TBM is still driving," says Darby. The...
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