Behind
the Cutter. Crews operate TBMS in tough ground
with high water pressure. (Photo by John J. Kosowatz for
ENR)
Stymied once by tremendous
groundwater pressures and difficult geology, tunnelers in
southern California are trying again to push two critical
links to completion in a $1.2-billion project that will provide
water for fast-growing and increasingly thirsty cities and
towns spreading east from Los Angeles. Two years into their
second attempt, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California
officials are keeping their fingers crossed as work crews
startand stopthe Arrowhead tunnels penetrating
the San Bernardino Mountains.
The tunnels mark the beginning
of the Inland Feeder project, a 44-mile conveyance system
that will deliver up to 646 million gallons per day of water
from the State Water Project when supplies in northern California
are plentiful. Its final destination is local groundwater
basins and Diamond Lake in Riverside County, which will provide
a supply of water capable of meeting the regions need
for up to six months in an emergency and up to five years
in a drought. Click
here to view map
The district is pinning its hopes
on two 19-ft-dia, advanced tunnel boring machines and a redesigned
tunnel and lining scheme. Because the project undercuts the
San Bernardino National Forest, it is governed by a strict
environmental permit issued by the National Forest Service
that limits groundwater drawdown. Those limits have plagued
MWD since 1997, when it began its first effort to build the
tunnels.
The original tunneling contract
was terminated in 2000 because water infiltration exceeded
permit levels and a grouting program proved tedious and impractical.
The route is close to the San Andreas fault and moves through
a number of fault zones and a variety of hard rock consisting
mostly of granite and gneiss, with a good deal of sandstone
and some marble.
"The geology is extremely
variable, fractural and extremely difficult," says
Dan Tempelis, MWD program manager.
Arrowhead West tunnel will stretch
19,800 ft, taking flows from the Devil Canyon powerplant and
delivering them to a pipeline and the 30,466-ft-long Arrowhead
East tunnel. Both are being lined with thick precast concrete
segments, but the design calls for erecting the segments with
bolted gaskets to accommodate pressures up to 25 bar, or 360
lb per sq in.
About 8,000 ft of the east tunnel
was mined under the original contract with the joint venture
contractor Shank/Balfour Beatty. Now, crews working a downhill
heading from Strawberry Creek portal toward the reach have
progressed 7,000 ft since the present contractor, a joint
venture of J.F. Shea Co. and Kenney Construction Co., began
work in late summer of 2003 under a $242-million contract.
"Things have been going well enough for the last couple
of months," says Tempelis.
Progress in the west tunnel, from
Waterman Canyon portal uphill toward Devil Canyon portal,
is slower. Some 2,500 ft of Arrowhead Wests 19,880 ft
have been excavated.
"Its been slow but steady,"
says Tempelis. "Theres been more startup problems.
Its been a difficult combination of groundwater control
and TBM performance."
The contractor declines comment
but has cited differing site conditions at the Waterman Canyon
portal that called for major grouting to consolidate material
ahead of the TBM. To handle groundwater volume and pressure,
Shea/Kenney purchased two TBMs from Germanys Herrenknecht
AG. They are designed to work in hard rock but are fitted
with a shield similar to soft ground machines. It allows them
to...
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