Keep ’Em Separated—Managing Contract Interfaces for the Westerly Storage Tunnel (WST) - NAT2022

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Michael A. Piepenburg Ben D. DiFiore Lisa M. Smiley Ryan P. Sullivan Robert J. Auber
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
8
File Size:
3422 KB
Publication Date:
Dec 1, 2022

Abstract

Pollution to Lake Erie will be significantly reduced by the Westerly Storage Tunnel (WST) system, which is mainly comprised of a 10,000-ft long tunnel and a dewatering pump station in the downstream tunnel shaft. Separate construction contracts for the tunnel and pump station required careful management of the interface risks. A key decision was to decouple the projects by relocating the mining shaft away from the pump station. The need to receive the tunnel boring machine (TBM) in the pump station shaft was eliminated by dismantling the 28-ft diameter TBM in the tunnel then carrying it back through the tunnel and up the mining shaft. This paper discusses how interface risks were successfully managed during design and construction to limit overall schedule impacts.
Citation

APA: Michael A. Piepenburg Ben D. DiFiore Lisa M. Smiley Ryan P. Sullivan Robert J. Auber  (2022)  Keep ’Em Separated—Managing Contract Interfaces for the Westerly Storage Tunnel (WST) - NAT2022

MLA: Michael A. Piepenburg Ben D. DiFiore Lisa M. Smiley Ryan P. Sullivan Robert J. Auber Keep ’Em Separated—Managing Contract Interfaces for the Westerly Storage Tunnel (WST) - NAT2022. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2022.

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