A small tunnel boring
machine has been stalled since June only yards away from the
finish of a 1,586-ft-long sewer line relocation under Los
Angeles Harbor by undetected sandy conditions in a pit excavated
to remove the TBM. The problems will delay completion by several
months and increase the project's $13.6-million cost by at
least $1 million, reports the contractor, WestCon Microtunneling
Inc., Pleasant Grove, Utah.
The utility relocation is one of
several required for a $167-million channel deepening project.
By September 2004, a joint venture of Great Lakes Dock &
Dredge Co. and Manson Construction Co. is scheduled to complete
dredging the channel from 45 to 53 ft deep to accommodate
larger-capacity container ships. Click
here to view chart
Although the dredging is so far
unaffected by the delays, "We're watching the situation very
closely," says Gerald Lum, assistant chief harbor engineer
with the Port of Los Angeles. Eight lines in all are slated
for relocation. The owner has already earmarked $7 million
to move three other utility lines, he says.
An official close to the project
says the Los Angeles Dept. of Public Works' bureau of engineering
selected microtunneling for the 30-in. force main even though
the project was "clearly an excellent choice for directional
drilling." The department did not respond to repeated requests
for comment. But in a September request for additional funding,
engineering staff acknowledge "that the city may be liable
for a portion of the cost" and that WestCon had attempted
"diligently" and "in good faith...to resolve the problem."
WestCon will relocate a 30-in.-dia
sewer force main, currently buried under some 12 ft of cover,
to 31 ft below the dredged main channel. About 1 mile north,
the company will increase coverage for two 20-in.-dia sewer
siphons from about 10 to 19 ft.
But "the soils weren't quite what
we expected" in the 105-ft-deep, 13-ft-wide reception shaft,
says Roger M. Ellis, WestCon's project manager. The tunneling
contractor expected groundwater to be contained by a silt
layer; instead it bubbled up through a previously unknown
sandy layer.
WestCon, which had selected soil
freezing to shore the pit before encountering the sandy conditions,
tried several other methods before using more expensive jet
grouting. It stopped the leaks, but also added hundreds of
thousands of dollars to the project's cost.
The 51-in.-dia Soltau open-face
TBM had attained what Ellis calls a "really good production"
of 70 to 80 ft per day through mostly clay deposits. But the
TBM could not complete excavation before the reception shaft,
and eventually became stuck, possibly jammed by water and
sand in its workings, he says. WestCon plans to hand-excavate
from the reception shaft to the TBM and determine whether
it should be removed or left partly in place.