An Analysis Of Present-Day Inadequacies And Needed Improvements In The Technology Of Immersed Tube Tunnel Construction

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 2414 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1970
Abstract
An immersed tube tunnel is one which is composed of elements that are prefabricated in a dry dock or on shipways, usually away from the actual tunnel site, floated into position and then lowered into a preexcavated and graded trench below a body of water. The elements or segments are then connected to each other under water, and the entire immersed tube tunnel covered with a protective blanket. Because water is essential, this method of construction offers advantages in a relatively limited field. By the very nature of the method, lowering elements to the bottom of an underwater trench, immersed tube tunnels are primarily used for crossing bodies of water, such as rivers, bays, straits, canals, etc. Although this method of construction was first used for a subaqueous railway crossing under the Detroit River in 1906-1910 and again in 1912-1915, for a four track subway tunnel under the Harlem River in New York, the reason immersed tube tunnels construction has not been used more extensively is simply a matter of economics. Bridges, compressed air tunnels and similar structures could be constructed at a lower cost.
Citation
APA:
(1970) An Analysis Of Present-Day Inadequacies And Needed Improvements In The Technology Of Immersed Tube Tunnel ConstructionMLA: An Analysis Of Present-Day Inadequacies And Needed Improvements In The Technology Of Immersed Tube Tunnel Construction. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1970.