Lake Merced Transport - Tunneling Through A Differing Site Condition

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 19
- File Size:
- 933 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1993
Abstract
INTRODUCTION The Lake Merced Transport is being constructed as part of San Francisco's Clean Water Program. The Clean Water Program, which began in the early 1970's, is designed to control wet weather, storm sewage overflows into the Pacific Ocean and San Francisco Bay. To accomplish this goal, a system of large underground storage and transport facilities, pump stations, modernized treatment plants, and outfalls is being built. By 1991, eighty percent of the system had been completed and was in operation. One of the remaining projects for the Clean Water Program is the Lake Merced Transport. The Lake Merced Transport is located in the extreme southwestern portion of San Francisco, as shown in Figure 1, Project Location. The transport will convey dry weather flow from the existing Lake Merced Pump Station to the Westside Pump Station. During wet weather, the transport will fill with sewage and runoff, with a storage capacity of 36 million liters. The Lake Merced Transport was expected to be excavated entirely within the Colma Formation, an alluvial deposit consisting of weakly cemented sand. Once excavation of the access portal at the Sloat/Great Highway parking lot began, it became evident that a portion of the tunnel would be excavated through beach/dune sand. Based upon the expectations of the Geotechnical Design Summary Report (GDSR), encountering beach/
Citation
APA:
(1993) Lake Merced Transport - Tunneling Through A Differing Site ConditionMLA: Lake Merced Transport - Tunneling Through A Differing Site Condition. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1993.