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TUNNELTALK ANNUAL REVIEW <strong>2010</strong><br />

Direct by Design<br />

Annual Review<br />

<strong>2010</strong><br />

PREVIEW


Difficult GrounD?<br />

cuStoM<br />

EPB.<br />

Robbins engineers EPBs to meet the criteria<br />

of your specific project—soil conditions, tunnel<br />

design, construction, schedule and site<br />

logistics. When you contact Robbins, we review<br />

your project to determine the best machine<br />

for your excavation needs. It may be the most<br />

advanced EPB and conveyor system. Or it may<br />

be a refurbished machine that gets your<br />

job done most efficiently.<br />

Building tunnels smarter.<br />

PREVIEW<br />

therobbinscompany.com<br />

sales@robbinstbm.com


Welcome to the digital edition of the TunnelTalk Annual Review <strong>2010</strong><br />

Each of the articles has been published first on www.TunnelTalk.com, the<br />

leading online magazine for the global underground construction industry.<br />

All the articles are hotlinked to the TunnelTalk online Archive allowing for<br />

direct, free access to the full coverage and a wealth of additional information.<br />

All advertisements are also hotlinked directly to the advertiser’s website. All<br />

featured videos are linked to the TunnelTalk YouTube channel.<br />

<strong>Digital</strong> issues of the Annual Review are available for purchase, allowing you to<br />

build a historic reference of the international tunnelling industry.<br />

Annual Review<br />

<strong>2010</strong><br />

elcome to the first TunnelTalk Annual Review – a record of the major events of <strong>2010</strong>, as<br />

Wresearched and reported by TunnelTalk. Far from a complete list of the tunnelling and<br />

underground space construction and planning that took place during <strong>2010</strong>, the publication<br />

is rather a compilation of project news and technological reports that marked the major<br />

achievements and charted trends for activity into the coming years.<br />

<strong>2010</strong> for most was a year of hunkering down. After the heady growth of the early 2000s, the<br />

deep, and shocking collapse of the financial world in 2008-09 had all sectors of the global<br />

economy reeling. For the international tunnelling industry, projects in development, some for<br />

decades, stared at delay or complete cancellation as governments slashed public spending and<br />

private enterprise saw a collapse of order books.<br />

Through <strong>2010</strong>, the task for industry leaders and project managers was to hang on to belief in their<br />

projects and convince governments of their viability and critical need. Vast amounts of stimulus<br />

package money certainly benefited many a tunnelling project, but intense scrutiny of budgets had<br />

every pound and penny questioned. Through the pain some mega projects survived - the Alaskan<br />

Way bored tunnel project in Seattle and Crossrail in London high among them. Others did not - the<br />

ARC project in New Jersey being a high profile cancellation.<br />

A trend established well before the economic crisis was commitment by Asian countries to<br />

tremendous public infrastructure investment. China and India are leaders of phenomenal<br />

programmes of tunnelling works throughout Asia and into the Middle East for high-speed rail,<br />

metros, roads, water supply, hydroelectric projects and much more. Hundreds, even thousands,<br />

of kilometres of excavation through all types of geology, using all types and sizes of tunnelling<br />

machines, and applying all manner of support and construction materials, have been added to the<br />

international order books of consultants, contractors and suppliers.<br />

At the same time, the underground option is being adopted throughout the world to comply with<br />

strict environmental regulations and social pressures and to repair, expand and replace ageing<br />

infrastructure. There can be no doubt: the global industry is looking at extreme demand on its<br />

resources in coming years.<br />

This raises urgent concerns for the capacity of suppliers to meet that demand as well as the critical<br />

need for trained engineers and skilled tunnel workers to bring all to reality. Looking into 2011 and<br />

years to come, education and training is a topic of concentration for TunnelTalk coverage as is<br />

reporting on new mega-projects of the world and the continuation of many thousands of local<br />

tunnelling projects that make living in urban and rural areas possible.<br />

While this printed publication is a tangible record of TunnelTalk’s commitment to reporting<br />

developments in the international industry, the magazine’s principal objective is to publish on the<br />

web. By the time anything is printed on paper and distributed it is dated. Publishing on the web is<br />

by far the most direct method of reporting information and researching specific data.<br />

Our readership continues to expand, our free weekly Alert reaches all corners of the globe, our<br />

Archive grows to include wider sources of inter-related information, our video reports bring an<br />

extra dimension to the industry’s media coverage, and our advertisers enjoy direct links to clients,<br />

contractors, and customers worldwide. Our services provide notice boards for those seeking Job<br />

Opportunities, for announcing procurement of new projects and contracts, and for the exchange<br />

of used equipment in the market place. Our Directory expands to include more of the world’s<br />

industry providers and coverage continues to stay abreast of progress and industry developments.<br />

Visit the website – TunnelTalk.com – to know the very latest of industry news and of immediate<br />

development of projects highlighted in this historical record of <strong>2010</strong>. An Annual Review of the<br />

TunnelTalk content for 2011 is now in the making. Contact us to book a place among its pages.<br />

PUBLISHER & EDITOR: Shani Wallis<br />

DESIGN & PRODUCTION: Claire Hunt<br />

ADVERTISING: Christie O’Reilly<br />

Copyright © TunnelTalk 2011. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or<br />

transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or otherwise, without the prior permission of the copyright owner. All views<br />

expressed in this journal are those of the respective contributors and are not necessarily the opinions of the publisher, neither do the<br />

publishers endorse any of the claims made in the articles or the advertisements. Printed by Buxton Press, UK.<br />

www.TunnelTalk.com<br />

Direct by Design<br />

Additional copies of the TunnelTalk <strong>2010</strong> Annual Review can be ordered on the website<br />

Underground in Action<br />

www.TunnelTalk.com<br />

ContactUs@TunnelTalk.com<br />

Contents<br />

MEGA PROJECTS<br />

7 Making history at Gotthard<br />

9 Tunnel beats bridge for Fehmarnbelt fixed link<br />

13 Alaskan Way mega-project procurement<br />

18 London prepares for Crossrail<br />

22 Hallandsås celebrates first tunnel finish<br />

24 Copenhagen begins Cityringen metro line<br />

25 Amsterdam’s Mixshield Metro drives<br />

26 Oslo-Ski high-speed rail options<br />

27 Exploratory bore beginning for Brenner Baseline<br />

PLANNED PROJECTS<br />

28 Baltimore’s billion dollar LRT vision<br />

28 Plan for LRT under downtown Ottawa<br />

29 Mega water supply plan for California<br />

30 CSO program for Washington DC<br />

30 Lee Tunnel start for Thames CSO cleanup<br />

PROJECT PROGRESS<br />

32 Devil’s Slide breaks through<br />

32 Digging begins at Caldecott<br />

33 Port of Miami undersea link underway<br />

34 Brisbane’s underground highways programme<br />

36 San Francisco invests in water supply security<br />

38 India progresses city centre metros<br />

39 Gautrain begins airport link services<br />

39 Delhi Metro meets Games target<br />

40 Onsite EPBM assembly in Mexico City<br />

41 Four pre-qualify for Dublin’s DART PPP<br />

42 Robbins metro connections in China<br />

43 Mobilization of Seattle’s University Link<br />

46 Fast track drill+blast productivity<br />

TBM RECORDER<br />

47 Largest ever TBM from Herrenknecht to Italy<br />

48 Robbins EBPMs heading for Mexico City<br />

49 Veteran TBM continues work on Faroe Islands<br />

51 Two NFM TBMs for Spanish road crossing<br />

51 Cutterhead changes for Barcelona TBM<br />

52 Caterpillar’s TBM strategy<br />

53 Aker Wirth TBM for steep inclined drive<br />

54 Collaboration for new TBM supplier<br />

INNOVATIONS<br />

54 New eco-friendly tail seal grease<br />

55 Lake Mead TBM designed for the extreme<br />

57 UK applies spray-on waterproofing<br />

61 Modern large diameter TBM rock tunnels<br />

63 20 years of fibre concrete linings in the UK<br />

64 A Direct Pipe first in USA<br />

65 Smart infrastructure research<br />

PROJECT RECOVERY<br />

66 Vancouver’s twin tunnels reach target<br />

67 Brightwater’s limit to costly delays<br />

68 Glacier drainage tunnel in full flow<br />

69 Repair of limited headrace collapse in Ethiopia<br />

70 Recovery of failed headrace at Glendoe<br />

71 Inundation at Lake Mead Intake No 3<br />

PREVIEW<br />

DISCUSSION FORUM<br />

72 Channel Tunnel 20 years on<br />

74 PPE last line of defence for safety at work<br />

75 ARC cancellation hit industry hard<br />

76 Surviving massive earthquakes<br />

77 Advocating DRBs<br />

78 DRB scores success in Dublin<br />

79 Company News<br />

CONFERENCES<br />

81 BAUMA goes on despite travel upheaval<br />

82 ITA success at Vancouver<br />

83 NAT Portland surpasses 2008 event<br />

84 Tribute to an engineering master<br />

85 Links across the waters<br />

89 Books and reports<br />

91 Awards and tributes<br />

SECTION TITLE


WORLD RECORD A<br />

CONGRATULATIONS ON THE FINAL BREAKTHROUGH<br />

The The final final breakthrough at at the the Gotthard Base Tunnel on on March 23, 23, 2011 in in the Western tunnel<br />

and and on on October 15, 15, <strong>2010</strong> <strong>2010</strong> in in the the Eastern tunnel marks the the most sig sig nificant milestone on the<br />

way way to to completing the the longest railway tunnel in in the the world. Europe salutes Switzerland’s<br />

achievement in creating this this 2 2 times 57 57 kilometer long epoch-making project to to connect<br />

northern and and southern Europe by by rail rail through the the Alps. Our thanks go go to to the client AlpTransit<br />

and and our our customers for for allowing us us to to be be part part of of this this spectacular feat and historic undertaking<br />

with with our our tunnelling technology.<br />

NORTH<br />

NORTH<br />

m above m above sea sea level<br />

level<br />

3,000<br />

3,000<br />

2,000<br />

2,000<br />

ERSTFELD<br />

1,000<br />

1,000<br />

AMSTEG<br />

Aar Aar Massif<br />

Massif<br />

2008 2008 Tunnel Tunnel length: length: 7,148m 7,148m (1) (1) 2009<br />

2009<br />

2003<br />

2003<br />

500<br />

500<br />

Tunnel Tunnel length: length: 7,116m 7,116m (2)<br />

(2)<br />

ERSTFELD / / AMSTEG<br />

Intschi Intschi Zone<br />

Zone<br />

Tunnel Tunnel length: length: 10,722m (3)<br />

(3)<br />

Tunnel Tunnel length: length: 10,703m (4)<br />

(4)<br />

AMSTEG / / SEDRUN<br />

AGN AGN Consortium: STRABAG AG AG Tunnelbau Schweiz (CH) (CH) / / STRABAG AG AG (A) (A)<br />

Tavetsch<br />

Intermediate Massif<br />

SEDRUN<br />

2006 2006 2007<br />

Drill Drill & & blast tunnelling<br />

PREVIEW<br />

(1) Gabi (1) Gabi I, I, Herrenknecht Gripper Gripper TBM TBM S-421, S-421, 9.58m 9.58m<br />

(2) Gabi (2) Gabi II, II, Herrenknecht Gripper Gripper TBM TBM S-422, S-422, 9.58m 9.58m<br />

April April and and May May 2008: 2008: Start Start of regular of regular tunnelling.<br />

July July 19, 19, 2009: 2009: 56m 56m of new of new tunnel tunnel are are created created in just in just 24 24 hours. hours. This This<br />

is deemed is deemed to be to a be world a world record record for a for hard a hard rock rock TBM TBM of such of such dimensions.<br />

June June 16, 16, 2009 2009 and and September 16, 16, 2009: 2009: The The machines reach reach their their<br />

targets targets after after just just 18 months 18 months – 6 – months 6 months ahead ahead of of schedule. Deviation<br />

from from the ideal the ideal axis axis measures measures only only 4mm 4mm in the in the horizontal and and 8mm 8mm in in<br />

the vertical. the vertical.<br />

Top Top tunnelling performances: 56m/day, 185m/week, 711m/month.<br />

(3) (3) Gabi Gabi I, I, Herrenknecht Gripper TBM TBM S-229, 9.58m<br />

(4) (4) Gabi Gabi II, II, Herrenknecht Gripper TBM TBM S-230, 9.58m<br />

October 2003 2003 and and January 2004: Start of of regular tunnelling.<br />

2004: 2004: The The TBMs TBMs pass pass the the Intschi fault fault zone zone more quickly than planned.<br />

June June 2005: A A mixture of of water and and fine fine material entered the the cutterhead<br />

in the in the western tube. tube. The The TBM TBM must must be be freed and and cannot restart tunnelling<br />

until until November.<br />

June June and and October 2006: The The construction site site teams successfully complete<br />

tunnelling at at the the end end of of the the lots, lots, 9 9 and/or 6 6 months ahead of of the the schedule.<br />

Top Top tunnelling performances: 40m/day, 210m/week, 688m/month.


AT THE GOTTHARD.<br />

AT THE NEW GOTTHARD BASE TUNNEL.<br />

Herrenknecht Aktiengesellschaft<br />

The Board of Management<br />

Dr.-Ing. E. h. Martin Herrenknecht<br />

Chairman of the Board of Management<br />

Main breakthrough<br />

October 15, <strong>2010</strong><br />

March Breakthrough 23, 2011eastern tunnel<br />

Gotthard Massif<br />

Piora Basin<br />

Gypsiferous cap-rock<br />

(5) Sissi, Herrenknecht Gripper TBM S-210, 9.43m<br />

(6) Heidi, Herrenknecht Gripper TBM S-211, 9.43m<br />

Dipl.-Ing. (FH) Gebhard Lehmann<br />

Vice Chairman of the Board of Management<br />

<strong>2010</strong> Tunnel length: 11,098m 11,134m (5)<br />

2007<br />

2011<br />

Tunnel length: 11,118m 11,088m (6)<br />

FAIDO / SEDRUN<br />

FAIDO<br />

2006<br />

Betriebswirt (VWA) Kurt Stiefel<br />

Member of the Board of Management<br />

BODIO / FAIDO<br />

Penninic Gneiss Zone<br />

Tunnel length: 13,426m (7)<br />

Tunnel length: 14,088m (8)<br />

BODIO / FAIDO<br />

TAT Consortium: Implenia Indus<strong>trial</strong> Construction, Alpine Bau GmbH, CSC Impresa Costruzioni SA, Hochtief AG, Impregilo SpA<br />

(7) Sissi, Herrenknecht Gripper TBM S-210, 8.83m<br />

(8) Heidi, Herrenknecht Gripper TBM S-211, 8.83m<br />

www.herrenknecht.com<br />

Eastern tunnel<br />

Western tunnel<br />

PREVIEW<br />

SOUTH<br />

BODIO<br />

2003<br />

July and October 2007: The TBMs begin tunnelling the second<br />

construction phase in the south with new, larger cutterheads ( 9.43m).<br />

October 2008 and February 2009: The <strong>150</strong> meter long Piora Basin<br />

is crossed successfully.<br />

March <strong>2010</strong>: A rock fall in the western tube and the subsequent<br />

stabilization measures interrupt tunnelling here until July.<br />

October 15, <strong>2010</strong> and March 23, 2011: Final breakthrough. World record.<br />

Top tunnelling performances: 36m/day, 179m/week, 705m/month.<br />

January and February 2003: Start of regular tunnelling.<br />

2003: After just 200 meters the tunnellers unexpectedly encountered<br />

unstable kakirites. This slows down tunnelling for 6 months, since every<br />

meter of tunnel must be secured in a complex process.<br />

2004 to 2006: Stable rock alternates with brittle, squeezing rock.<br />

September 6 and October 26, 2006: Successful breakthroughs<br />

at the Faido underground multifunctional station.<br />

Top tunnelling performances: 38m/day, 190m/week, 619m/month.


h ERRENk NEchT AG | uTILITy T u NNELLING | T RAffI c T u NNELLING<br />

Breakthrough of<br />

Double Shield TBM,<br />

Ø 12.34m,<br />

Clem Jones Tunnel,<br />

Brisbane<br />

China, Mixshield, Ø 15.43m<br />

WORLD LEADER IN LARGE DIAMETER TBMs.<br />

XXL Tunnelling<br />

Mechanized tunnelling technology<br />

for soft ground and hard rock<br />

Traffic and utility infrastructures<br />

Diameters 0.10–19m<br />

More than 80 projects<br />

diameter >10m<br />

More than 320km tunnel<br />

diameter >10m<br />

Spain, EPB Shield, Ø 15.20m Italy, EPB Shield, Ø 15.55m<br />

Australia, Double Shield TBM, Ø 12.34m<br />

Construction companies have successfully excavated more than 320 kilometers of<br />

traffic and utility tunnel with diameters of more than 10 meters using Herrenknecht<br />

technology. In Shanghai the two world’s largest Mixshield TBMs, Herrenknecht S-317<br />

and S-318, Ø 15.43m, excavated three-lane road tunnels under the Yangtze River. The<br />

two giants finished their 7.5km drives one year ahead of schedule and the tunnels<br />

could be opened to the public in time for the <strong>2010</strong> WorldExpo. Brisbane is reducing<br />

above-ground road traffic significantly by investing in efficient underground infrastructure.<br />

Two Herrenknecht Double Shield TBMs (Ø 12.43m) tunnelled under the<br />

Brisbane River for the Clem Jones Tunnel and two even larger Herrenknecht EPB Shields<br />

(Ø 12.45m) are being used for Brisbane’s Airport Link. The world’s largest tunnel boring<br />

machine, the EPB Shield for the Galleria Sparvo road tunnels in Italy with a diameter<br />

of 15.55m has successfully passed workshop acceptance at the Herrenknecht headquarters<br />

in December <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

As the only company worldwide, Herrenknecht delivers cutting-edge tunnel<br />

boring machines for all ground conditions and all diameters. Together with the Group’s<br />

innovative specialists, Herrenknecht is able to offer integrated solutions around tunnel<br />

construction at all times. More than 60 international Herrenknecht companies<br />

provide a comprehensive range of services close to the project site and the customer.<br />

PREVIEW<br />

Herrenknecht AG<br />

D-77963 Schwanau<br />

Phone + 49 7824 302-0<br />

Fax + 49 7824 3403<br />

marketing@herrenknecht.com<br />

www.herrenknecht.com


In March 2011, the world’s longest rail tunnel ever undertaken prepared to record<br />

its final breakthrough deep beneath the mountains of the Swiss Alps. The final<br />

breakthrough to connect all headings of the first tunnel into one long tube<br />

through the base of the Gotthard Massive was recorded in October <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

Making history at Gotthard<br />

History was made on Friday<br />

15 October <strong>2010</strong> when the<br />

first Bodio-Faido TBM broke<br />

through into the drill+blast heading<br />

from Sedrun to finish 57km of rail<br />

tunnel through the base of the Swiss<br />

Alps from Erstfeld in the north and<br />

Bodio in the south.<br />

Swiss politicians and dignitaries,<br />

project directors and contract<br />

managers as well as senior managers<br />

of the leading suppliers and the<br />

workers themselves all gathered for<br />

an official breakthrough on Friday<br />

afternoon when the TBM fired up at<br />

2pm to cut the last 1.5m of rock and<br />

mark this truly monumental feat of<br />

civil engineering and endurance.<br />

The crews of the TBMs and<br />

drill+blast headings blazed a trail.<br />

This last breakthrough occurred<br />

TunnelTalk reporting<br />

nearly 2,000m below the top of the<br />

Alps and more than 8km from the<br />

nearest exit through the 800m deep<br />

shaft at Sedrun, and more than<br />

13km from the access adit at Faido.<br />

On a project of this magnitude -<br />

the longest, largest, most ambitious<br />

and most technically demanding<br />

tunnelling project of this age - there<br />

have been serious set backs and<br />

delays as crews have tunnelled into<br />

the unknown. Extreme geological<br />

conditions buried a TBM heading<br />

from the Amsteg adit for more than<br />

six months and had another TBM<br />

from the Faido adit at a standstill<br />

for five months from March to<br />

July <strong>2010</strong>.<br />

These and other challenges,<br />

some not related to the excavation<br />

work, have caused a slip of some<br />

Celebration of an<br />

epic achievement<br />

PREVIEW<br />

MEGA PROJECTS<br />

www.TunnelTalk.com TunnelTalk ANNUAL REVIEW <strong>2010</strong> 7


MEGA PROJECTS<br />

10 years from the original project timeline.<br />

The original plan, set in 1998, was to have<br />

the baseline railway operating in 2007.<br />

As it is, TBM excavation of the longest<br />

drives for the main tunnels started from the<br />

Bodio portals in 2001 with drill+blast work<br />

starting from the base of the deep access<br />

shaft at Sedrun in 2002. Work on the<br />

shorter TBM drives from the north Erstfeld<br />

portals started in 2006. The project is now<br />

scheduled to open at the end of 2017.<br />

When the Gotthard Base Tunnel<br />

During the course of realising the<br />

massive Gotthard Baseline project,<br />

many different contractors and engineering<br />

firms, many thousands of workers, and<br />

legions of different suppliers and equipment<br />

manufacturers contributed to the effort.<br />

Three construction contracts were let<br />

for the main tunnels and their passages<br />

and chambers.<br />

• At Sedrun, the consortium of Implenia/<br />

Frutiget/Bilfinger Berger/Pizzarotti<br />

completed 11km of drill+blast<br />

headings at the bottom of the two<br />

800m deep access shafts.<br />

• At the south, TAT, the Tunnel AlpTransit<br />

Ticino JV comprising Implenia/<br />

Alpine Bau/CSC Impresa/Hochtief/<br />

Impregilo completed two lots and<br />

operated two Herrenknecht TBMs<br />

running parallel for about 14km from the<br />

Bodio portal initially and then carrying<br />

on into the 11km long drives from the<br />

Faido access adit to breakthrough into<br />

the Sedrun drill+blast work.<br />

• From the north, the AGN,<br />

Arbeitsgemeinschaft Gotthard-<br />

Basistunnel Nord JV of STRABAG<br />

AG of Switzerland and Austria,<br />

managed the two further Herrenknecht<br />

TBMs on the project for the initial<br />

10.7km of tunnel from the Amsteg<br />

opens in 2017, travel time between Zurich<br />

and Milano will be shortened by one hour.<br />

In addition, freight trains will be able to<br />

travel the straight, flat tunnel alignment<br />

with twice the load and at twice the<br />

speed. People and goods will cross the<br />

Alps faster, more safely and in a much<br />

more environmentally friendly way. The<br />

breakthrough of the first running tunnel<br />

of the twin tubes through the base of<br />

the Alps is a historic and record-setting<br />

achievement.<br />

adit to breakthrough with the Sedrun<br />

drill+blast work and then the 7.1km<br />

parallel drives from the Ersteld portal<br />

to Amsteg.<br />

Herrenknecht AG supplied four gripper<br />

rock TBMs of 8.8m to 9.5m diameter to<br />

the consortia for the north and south lots.<br />

The machines excavated a combined total<br />

of 85km of the 2 x 57km long twin tube<br />

complex. For development works and the<br />

central Sedrun drill+blast excavation, fleets<br />

of Atlas Copco and Sandvik jumbos were<br />

used with their support systems.<br />

Muck haulage behind the advancing<br />

TBMs was via long continuous conveyors<br />

supplied by H+E Logistics but the supplyline<br />

rail-bound workhorses of the longdistance<br />

headings teamed once again the<br />

familiar duo of SCHÖMA locomotives and<br />

Mühlhäuser rolling stock. SCHÖMA supplied<br />

more than 125 powerful locomotives to<br />

the project. Mühlhäuser delivered more<br />

than 500 units to the different contractors<br />

including wagons, concrete remixers, flat<br />

cars, man-riders and specialised ambulance<br />

cars to assist in any emergency.<br />

Concrete admixtures, shotcreting<br />

machines and a fire protection mortar<br />

were contributions by BASF MEYCO to<br />

the different construction contracts.<br />

DELVO ® Crete Stabilizer 10 slowed<br />

The last of the four Herrenknecht<br />

TBMs that have excavated much of the<br />

total underground works was working<br />

towards the very last breakthrough for the<br />

entire project in March 2011. •<br />

References<br />

• Breakthrough milestone for Gotthard Base<br />

Tunnel - TunnelTalk, September 2009<br />

• Gotthard TBM safely across the Piora<br />

Mulda - TunnelTalk, Nov 2008<br />

• Bodio tunnel lining wurms - Switzerland -<br />

TunnelTalk, Dec 2004<br />

Concrete contributions to a mammoth undertaking<br />

down cement hydration to ensure an open<br />

time of four to six hours while GLENIUM ®<br />

superplasticizers maintained workability after<br />

long distance transportation and exposure<br />

to the high temperatures in the interior of the<br />

mountain. The combination was used for<br />

cast final lining as well as shotcrete. MEYCO ®<br />

SA 160 accelerator was added to shotcrete<br />

for fast solidification.<br />

MEYCO ® Fireshield 1350 fire protection<br />

mortar was supplied to protect the concrete<br />

linings from spalling damage in the event<br />

of an in-tunnel fire in the Bodio tunnel<br />

section while MEYCO ® Potenza and Oruga<br />

shotcreting robots were delivered in numbers<br />

to the Erstfeld and Sedrun headings.<br />

To the effort Bekaert supplied volumes<br />

of Dramix ® steel fibre for shotcrete<br />

reinforcement as well as its Duomix® M6<br />

Fire protection polymer fibres.<br />

Many different sets of formwork were<br />

supplied to the project, several of the<br />

specialist pieces by Doka of Austria. For<br />

the Erstfeld lot its equipment lined the two<br />

large span Y-branch crossover caverns.<br />

The congratulations of all in the<br />

international tunnelling industry goes<br />

to the workers, suppliers and all the<br />

managers involved who teamed together<br />

to bring the project to its successful endof-excavation<br />

milestone. •<br />

Among principle suppliers (clockwise from top left): Herrenkneckt gripper TBMs; Schöma locos and Mühlhäuser concrete<br />

remixer cars; Doka formwork; Bekaert steel and polyfibre as well as BASF MEYCO concrete admixtures<br />

PREVIEW<br />

8<br />

TunnelTalk ANNUAL REVIEW <strong>2010</strong><br />

www.TunnelTalk.com


Contrary to expectation, an immersed tube across the 20km Fehmarnbelt between<br />

Denmark and Germany has come in a whisker less than a cable-stayed bridge.<br />

Technical risks, long term environmental impacts, navigational safety and developments<br />

toward more carbon efficient transportation played a large part in reducing the<br />

estimated cost of the undersea alternative and elevated it to the preferred solution.<br />

The numbers are in and the tunnel<br />

has it by a nose! As large as the<br />

numbers are for the scope of the<br />

project, a cable-stayed bridge across<br />

the Fehmarnbelt for a fixed connection<br />

between Denmark and Germany comes<br />

in at DKK 38.5 billion (about US$7 billion<br />

or E5 billion) while the estimate for an<br />

immersed tube across the 20km strait is<br />

just slightly less at DKK 37.9 billion.<br />

After agreeing the fixed link concept<br />

in September 2008, two teams in the<br />

Danish owner organisation, Femern A/S,<br />

developed conceptual designs and cost<br />

estimates for a four-lane highway and twotrack<br />

railway connection across the sea on<br />

a cable-stayed bridge and in an immersed<br />

tube tunnel. Of these, the bridge had<br />

been considered the less expensive option<br />

through the process and therefore the<br />

favoured plan. Announcement of the cost<br />

estimates in November <strong>2010</strong> produced<br />

a surprise result with the immersed tube<br />

revealing a lower estimate than the bridge.<br />

The result illustrates the tremendous<br />

work achieved by the tunnel team in<br />

exploring new concepts to reduce the<br />

Tunnel beats bridge for<br />

Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link<br />

cost of building, operating and maintaining<br />

an undersea link. Changing attitudes and<br />

new techniques for reducing polluting<br />

substances into the atmosphere also<br />

played a role in the outcome.<br />

One of the most significant cost savings<br />

was elimination of an intermediate manmade<br />

island designed to accommodate a<br />

ventilation shaft and equipment installation.<br />

Projections of low traffic volumes in the<br />

initial years, together with significant and<br />

rapid technical advances in reducing toxic<br />

emissions by road vehicles, have allowed<br />

the adoption of longitudinal ventilation in<br />

the long four-lane traffic tunnel. Instead<br />

of large ventilation buildings and the<br />

intermediate vent station island, fans will<br />

be installed in ceiling recesses at 400m<br />

intervals along the 20km link. This also<br />

optimizes the design of the tunnel’s cross<br />

section eliminating the need for separate<br />

transverse or semi-transverse ventilation<br />

ducts. “The change reduces the volume of<br />

concrete in the immersed tube elements by<br />

some 10%, which is a significant saving on<br />

a project of this scale,” said Steen Lykke,<br />

Project Director Tunnel for Femern A/S.<br />

TunnelTalk reporting<br />

Since release of the cost comparisons<br />

in November <strong>2010</strong>, Danish politicians<br />

have adopted the immersed tunnel<br />

as the preferred option. “The decision<br />

means that Femern A/S has reached an<br />

important milestone,” said Leo Larsen,<br />

CEO, Femern A/S. “As our conceptual<br />

design projects are based on a thorough<br />

technical foundation, we can now focus on<br />

ensuring that the authorities approve the<br />

project, including from an environmental<br />

perspective.”<br />

Making the case<br />

Fewer risks, all told, in both the<br />

construction and operational phases than<br />

a cable-stayed bridge is how leaders of the<br />

project say they arrived at recommending<br />

the immersed tunnel.<br />

A cable-stayed bridge across the<br />

Fehmarnbelt, with two free spans of 724m<br />

each, would be the largest spans ever<br />

constructed for either road or rail traffic.<br />

Compounded by the high shipping traffic<br />

in the area, this would pose significant risks<br />

in the construction phase in terms of cost<br />

overruns, delays and indus<strong>trial</strong> accidents.<br />

PREVIEW<br />

Immersed tube tunnel (left) comes in slightly less costly and considered less risky over all than the cable-stayed bridge alternative (right)<br />

MEGA PROJECTS<br />

www.TunnelTalk.com TunnelTalk ANNUAL REVIEW <strong>2010</strong><br />

9


MEGA PROJECTS<br />

An immersed tunnel will also<br />

present considerable technical<br />

challenges. However, unlike a bridge,<br />

an immersed tunnel will not entail as<br />

many technical operations which push<br />

the limits of what has been done before.<br />

Essentially, the procedure will be the<br />

same as it was for construction of the<br />

Øresund Fixed Link’s immersed tunnel<br />

under the Drogden Channel between<br />

Denmark and Sweden, only many times<br />

longer and deeper. The Fehmarnbelt<br />

Tunnel will be just under 18km long and<br />

up to 30-40m deep, while the Øresund<br />

Tunnel is approximately 4km long and<br />

about 10m deep.<br />

Both a cable-stayed bridge and<br />

an immersed tunnel would impact the<br />

marine environment but the preliminary<br />

conclusion is that a bridge would have<br />

slightly more significant permanent<br />

impact than an immersed tunnel.<br />

In the interests of navigation safety,<br />

a tunnel poses fewer risks than a<br />

bridge. The Fehmarnbelt is a heavily<br />

trafficked stretch of water with 47,000<br />

vessel transits per annum (2006). In<br />

the coming years, traffic is expected to<br />

increase substantially to about 90,000<br />

vessel transits in 2030.<br />

Financial factors<br />

In financial terms, there is very little<br />

difference between the two projects.<br />

The construction estimate (in 2008<br />

price level) for an immersed tunnel is<br />

E5.1 billion and for a cable-stayed<br />

bridge, E5.2 billion.<br />

The construction time for the<br />

tunnel is estimated at 6½ years, and<br />

for the bridge, 6 years. The cost of<br />

operation and maintenance is slightly<br />

higher for a tunnel than for a bridge.<br />

All told, the payback time for the two<br />

projects would be essentially the same<br />

at about 30 years for the coast-tocoast<br />

project. In a press release of the<br />

announcement, Danish Minister for<br />

Transport Hans Chr. Schmidt stated:<br />

“From an overall financial perspective,<br />

there is no difference between bridge<br />

and tunnel. The cost of the two<br />

solutions is, generally speaking, the<br />

same, which confirms the project’s<br />

sound financial basis.”<br />

Over the coming year, Femern<br />

A/S will complete the Environmental<br />

Impact Statement to be considered<br />

by the authorities in Denmark and<br />

Germany in accordance with national<br />

regulations and submit an application<br />

for construction approval to German<br />

authorities during the first six months<br />

of 2012. A construction bill will then<br />

be submitted to the Danish Parliament,<br />

Folketinget, in 2013. Following<br />

approvals, construction of one of<br />

Europe’s biggest infrastructure projects<br />

is expected to commence in 2014 and<br />

open to traffic in 2020. •<br />

Innovations for the<br />

In September 2008, the Danish and<br />

German Ministers of Transport signed<br />

a treaty to establish a link across the<br />

Fehmarnbelt between Lolland, Denmark<br />

and Fehmarn, Germany. The same treaty<br />

was subsequently approved by the Danish<br />

Parliament and the German Bundestag.<br />

The Fehmarnbelt Fixed Link will be the<br />

third major crossing in Denmark after<br />

realization of the Great Belt (1998) and<br />

the Øresund (2000) links. It represents the<br />

missing link in an efficient transport corridor<br />

between Scandinavia and Europe and will<br />

accommodate a four-lane motorway and a<br />

double track railway (Fig 1).<br />

Denmark has assumed sole<br />

responsibility for the financing,<br />

implementation and future operation of the<br />

fixed road and rail link and for this purpose<br />

the state owned organization Femern A/S<br />

has been established. A feasibility study in<br />

1996-1999 looked into a great number of<br />

possible solutions, including bridge and<br />

tunnel (immersed and bored) options, train<br />

shuttles, double and four lane motorways,<br />

single and double track rail, integrated or<br />

seperated from the motorway. On the basis<br />

of the study it was decided to construct<br />

a four-lane motorway and a double track<br />

railway. A cable-stayed bridge was favoured<br />

and the Danish and German Governments<br />

labelled this as the preferred solution.<br />

However, it was decided that an immersed<br />

tube tunnel alternative for the entire crossing<br />

had to be investigated during the planning<br />

stage. Variants which combine in-line or<br />

parallel bridge-tunnel combinations were<br />

not considered due to the great waterdepth,<br />

which would require a huge reclamation to<br />

connect the bridge and tunnel for the in<br />

line option; and for economical reasons for<br />

the parallel arrangement. The final decision<br />

between either a bridge or a tunnel was to<br />

be taken only after it had become clear that<br />

both options were technically feasible and<br />

necessary approvals could be obtained.<br />

In April 2009, Femern A/S selected the<br />

Rambøll-Arup-TEC JV for the design of the<br />

tunnel alternative.<br />

The immersed tunnel solution will set<br />

new records in terms of its dimensions; it<br />

will be the longest tunnel and one of the<br />

deepest tunnels of this type ever built with<br />

a length of 20km and foundation depths<br />

reaching more than 40m under the sea<br />

surface. The size of the project will create<br />

major challenges for designers and future<br />

contractors and will allow for an innovative<br />

approach based on proven technology.<br />

If constructed, the immersed tunnel, will<br />

also be the world’s longest combined road<br />

and rail tunnel; the world’s longest under<br />

water tunnel for road; and the deepest<br />

immersed tunnel with road and rail traffic.<br />

The size of the project is about five times<br />

the tunnel part of the Øresund Link between<br />

Denmark and Sweden and will require a<br />

huge logistical and qualitative challenge<br />

to build in the available construction time<br />

of approximately six years. The amount of<br />

material to be dredged for the trench is about<br />

20 million m 3 and the amount of concrete<br />

for the immersed tube elements is about 3<br />

million m 3 . Production of the elements would<br />

require four to five construction facilities as<br />

used for the Øresund Link.<br />

Operational safety in a tunnel of this<br />

length is a challenge and requires careful<br />

PREVIEW<br />

References<br />

• Fehmarnbelt fixed link options -<br />

TunnelTalk, June 2009<br />

• Cost comparison for Fehmarnbelt link<br />

options - TunnelTalk, Nov <strong>2010</strong><br />

Fig 1. Integration of the road and rail Fehmarnbelt fixed link<br />

10<br />

TunnelTalk ANNUAL REVIEW <strong>2010</strong><br />

www.TunnelTalk.com

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