Central Subway Tunnel Construction Instrumentation: Lessons Learned, San Francisco, CA

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Kenneth A. Johnson Michael V. Wolski Ryan O. McCarter
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
12
File Size:
6283 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2015

Abstract

"The Central Subway is Phase 2 of the San Francisco Municipal Transportation Agency’s (SFMTA) Third Street Light Rail project and will extend the existing Phase 1 initial operating segment from its current connection to the Embarcadero line at Fourth and King streets along Fourth Street to Market Street, under the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART) and Muni Metro tunnels and then north beneath Stockton Street to Chinatown (Fig. 1).Total new track to be constructed as part of the Phase 2 work consists of approximately 734 m (2,410 ft) of surface track and 2,636 m (8,650 ft) of tunnels. The tunnels were constructed as twin, singletrack bores by two tunnel boring machines (TBMs) (Johnson, 2014) moving north from the southern end of the launch box under the I 80 freeway between Bryant and Harrison streets. North of Chinatown Station the TBMs continued another approximately 683 m (2,240 ft) to a retrieval shaft near Columbus Ave. at Washington Square. The project also includes five cross passages to connect the two tunnels, and three underground stations (the Yerba Buena/ Moscone Station, Union Square/Market Street Station and Chinatown Station.)Excavation of the twin tunnels was performed with two TBMs, with both TBMs driving northward from the launch box. TBM excavation was performed such that the location of the machines was staggered to separate the active excavation faces by a minimum of 91 m (300 ft) between headings. This minimum separation was maintained until the first TBM arrived at the retrieval shaft plug, at which time the separation requirement was relaxed.Excavation began with the “southbound” (SB) tunnel which will ultimately accommodate the southbound TBM light rail trains followed by the second TBM in the “northbound” (NB) tunnel. With the completion of the drives in June 2014, cross passage excavation then began and was completed in April 2015. Overall, construction of the Central Subway tunnels was a success considering the nature and complexity of the project. Additional details of the completion of the Central Subway tunnels are presented in another paper from the RETC 2015 conference (Leong et al., 2015)."
Citation

APA: Kenneth A. Johnson Michael V. Wolski Ryan O. McCarter  (2015)  Central Subway Tunnel Construction Instrumentation: Lessons Learned, San Francisco, CA

MLA: Kenneth A. Johnson Michael V. Wolski Ryan O. McCarter Central Subway Tunnel Construction Instrumentation: Lessons Learned, San Francisco, CA. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2015.

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