Environmental Considerations In The Design Of The Route H-3 Tunnels, Hawaii

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 23
- File Size:
- 1258 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1974
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Designers of major public works projects in the past have displayed varying degrees of environmental consciousness, and tunnel designers in particular have always had to deal with certain environmental considerations - ventilation, lighting, aesthetics - as matters of primary design. Today, however, with a widening sector of the public becoming environmentally aware, tunnels are treated as elements of whole transportation systems, and are subject to increasing environmental scrutiny. The Route H-3 tunnels in Hawaii are examples of the time, care, and detail involved in a major rock tunnel project. Project Description The Route. Interstate Route H-3 is a proposed 10-mile highway crossing the Koolau Mountain Range on the island of Oahu, Hawaii, providing a direct connection between the Pearl Harbor area and the windward part of the island in the vicinity of Kaneohe. It is designed as a dual highway with provision to accommodate mass transit. As shown on Figure 1, the project includes two sets of twin bore tunnels (through the Main Koolau Range and through Red Hill), three highway sections of which two are through largely undeveloped mountain valleys (South Halawa and Moanalua), a viaduct, and three interchanges. From the Halawa Interchange to the Kaneohe Interchange, the proposed highway consists of two 3-lane roadways separated by a median where the highway is at grade. One lane of each roadway will not be constructed initially but will be landscaped and reserved for mass
Citation
APA:
(1974) Environmental Considerations In The Design Of The Route H-3 Tunnels, HawaiiMLA: Environmental Considerations In The Design Of The Route H-3 Tunnels, Hawaii. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1974.