...resulting increased water
flow capacity below the road cuts the frequency of total tunnel
closures, he adds.
Organizing
In winning the contract, SMART JV secured the overall task
of designing, financing and procuring the entire project and
operating the highway portion. The government will manage
its flood control functions. But the joint ventures
equal partners, Malaysia Mining Corp. (MMC) Berhad and Gamuda
Berhad, lacked the technical experience for such a project,
says Sivalingam. With annual sales of about $400 million,
Gamuda, for example, has built drill-and-blast tunnels, but
this is its first machine-driven project.
For construction, MMC and Gamuda
set up a separate joint venture (MMCG) and awarded it a turnkey
contract in 2002. When Gus Klados came in June 2002 as senior
tunnel specialist, the design was partly done but the tunneling
method was undecided, he says.
KLADOS
By then, Mott MacDonald already
had recommended using slurry-faced TBMs, but vendors
also had proposed earth-pressure-balance technology. Having
struggled in a previous Singapore job with an earth-pressure
TBM in difficult rock with high water pressure, "I brought
confirmation that we needed a slurry shield," says Klados.
Klados also brought enough experience
and contacts to create a tunneling organization almost from
nothing. He started in the business at home, on the Budapest
metro in the early 1970s. From there he moved to the Calcutta
subway job, before joining the Channel Tunnel team in England.
He then took in the Lesotho highlands water project and the
Athens metro before heading for a decade in East Asia.
"I had to set up a company
within the joint venture but I didnt have experienced
people," says Klados. "Gamuda had done the best
it could in the circumstances.... They [let] me do the job.
It was [for them] a big leap of faith."
For essential "back office
engineering and work preparation," Klados relied on Paris-based
Vinci Group. Former colleagues helped to specify and procure
the segment molds in France and the TBMs in Germany. Altogether,
he recruited 13 expatriate tunnel specialists.
The team built up by Klados wins
plaudits from Peter Chiappa, project manager with Germanys
Wayss & Freytag Ingenieurbau A.G., Frankfurt, which now
is driving the tunnels north 5.3 km. "I was very
surprised from the very beginning how professionally they
handled this," he says. W&F in early 2003 won the
contract to drive the northern tunnel section, with an option
for the southern 4 km that never materialized.
"We had to decide whether
to outsource the whole thing or do one half ourselves,"
explains Sivalingam. Without any bored tunnel experience,
the Maaysians took on the southern drive aiming "to become
a serious tunneling company," he adds. As a result, Klados
took direct control of the southern drive, while overseeing
all tunnel work.
Double
Deck. Highway decks are attached to lining segments with
shear connectors.
Early Changes
MMCG first chose to procure tunneling equipment for the north
drive and hand it to a contractor, when appointed, to save
time. Because of its limited TBM experience, the team decided
to buy the TBMs with all associated equipment from a single
supplier. But W&F had other ideas.
"As discussion went on, the
whole concept changed," says Chiappa. Apart from having
its own bentonite separation plant, "we offered a TBM
with second hand components, which had a much shorter delivery
time," he adds. The move saved the contractor several
million dollars and got the machine on site three months ahead
of the unit destined for MMCJVs south drive, he says.
Germanys Herrenknecht A.G,
Schwanau, won orders for both machines in 2003. The 13.2-m-dia
mixshield TBMs use compressed air to balance ground pressure
in the face. Bentonite is pumped through a pressure wall and
then via a compressed air chamber, which ensures the slurry
pressure matches that in the soil and water ahead.
The advantage of this arrangement
over conventional slurry machines is "if you come out
of rock and hit an area of soft ground, the compressed air
expands [quickly] and the slurry flows in to fill the partial
void. You can maintain pressure to support the face,"
says Darby.
The feature seems well suited to
Kuala Lumpurs tricky ground. Under superficial loose
alluvium, the tunnel route cuts through complicated limestone
with a variable profile and containing dissolved cavities
filled with peat-like soil. Most of the south drive and over
half the north bore is in this karstic rock, while the rest
is in soft material.
Tunnelers know when they hit a
cavity because cutting resistance drops, slurry changes color
and the volume of grout needed behind the segments doubles
or triples. "We have to watch it like an eagle,"
Klados says. Solution caverns can be warren-like, consuming
huge amounts of bentonite.
With about 13 m of cover in places,
"it is a very shallow drive, especially in areas in the
south drive where we are driving in soft rock...the bottom
part of the face might be in limestone with alluvium at the
top," says Klados. With such treacherous conditions,
the contractor has not stinted with soil investigations.
Curves.
Tunnel has tighter bends than normal for a large TBM.
TBM Track
Both TBMs cutterheads are mounted on a spherical main
bearing to steer a 250-m radius, says Klados. Because the
tunnel follows roads as much as possible, its bends are much
tighter than would be normal for such a large machine, he
adds.
The first machine, W&Fs,
arrived in Kuala Lumpur a month after the 150-m-long, 25-m-deep
launch pit was completed in January of last year. The second
machine followed a few months later.
W&Fs machine set off
on its 5.3-km drive last May, with Chiappas team "fine
tuning" all the processes to the difficult ground, he
says. Chiappa knows of no other bentonite machine to have
worked in such karstic rock. Having built up a rhythm of work,
W&F was interrupted after some 700 m by the huge open
pit of the north highway ramp.
Having hauled the machine some
200 m through the pit, W&F restarted work in February,
aiming to finish by May 2006. The average advance in the first
700 m was just over 5 m in 24 hours, exceeding that by 50%
toward the end, says Chiappa. He hopes to do better than 10
m a day once his team regains its beat.
MMCGs southern TBM, took
off last August, for completion in March 2006. Working around
the clock, the TBM has achieved 100 m in a week, a "good
performance with such a large diameter slurry shield,"
says Klados. In following the W&F machine by a few months,
MMCG will have gained vicariously, believes Chiappa. "When
mistakes were made, they didnt need to repeat them,"
he says.
Gives readers a glimpse of who is planning and constructing some of the largest projects throughout the U.S. Much information for pulse is derived from McGraw-Hill Construction Dodge.
For more information on a project in Pulse that has a DR#, or for general information on Dodge products and services, please visit our Website at www.dodge.construction.com.
Information is provided on construction projects in following stages in each issue of ENR: Planning, Contracts/Bids/Proposals and Bid/Proposal Dates.