Mechanized Tunnelling Driving Toronto’s Big Move - Eglinton–Scarborough Crosstown Tunnel Construction (ECLC1-15)

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Jumpei Yamashita Malcolm Sheehan Osamu Nishikokura Darrell Liebno
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
9
File Size:
1265 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2016

Abstract

"The Eglinton-Scarborough Crosstown Project builds a 19km LRT corridor that includes a 10km underground portion, between Keele Street and Laird Drive. The West Tunnel Contract (ECLC1-15) includes 6.5km of twin EPB TBM bored tunnels with a 5.75m internal diameter precast concrete segment lining (PCTL), between Keele Street and Yonge Street. This paper summarizes the overall scope of work, the technical challenges faced and innovative solutions developed by the contractor during the TBM move across an existing subway tunnel using state of the art high capacity strandjack gantry crane.1. PROJECT OVERVIEW The Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area (GTHA) is Canada’s largest urban region, populated with over 6 million people, and is one of the most rapidly growing regions in North America. One forecast estimates that the population of this region will increase to 8.6 million by the year 2031. In September 2008, Metrolinx, an agency of the Government of Ontario, launched a 25-year regional transportation plan named “The Big Move” to cope with the expected increase in transportation demand. The Eglinton-Scarborough Crosstown, one of the projects included in “The Big Move”, is a light rail transit (LRT) that will run across Toronto in an east-west direction between Mount Dennis and Kennedy along Eglinton Avenue. In October 2012, the West Tunnel Contract of the Crosstown LRT (ECLC1-15) was awarded to Crosstown Transit Constructors (CTC), a joint venture between Obayashi Canada Ltd., Kenny Construction Company, Kenaidan Contracting Ltd. and Technicore Underground Inc. The project includes approximately 6.2 km long twin bored tunnels, 9 cross passages, 1 emergency exit building, 7 sets of station headwalls, and an intermediate pair of extraction and launch shafts. Each of 6.5 km long twin tunnels are divided by the existing subway station into two drives: the first half from the launch shaft LS-1 (west of Keele Station) to the extraction shaft ES-1 (west of Eglinton West Station), and the second half from the launch shaft LS-2 (east of Eglinton West Station) to Yonge Station, as shown in Figure-1. The TBMs are extracted at ES-1 and moved to LS-2 over the existing Yonge-University Subway Line at Eglinton West Station before resumption of tunneling at LS-2."
Citation

APA: Jumpei Yamashita Malcolm Sheehan Osamu Nishikokura Darrell Liebno  (2016)  Mechanized Tunnelling Driving Toronto’s Big Move - Eglinton–Scarborough Crosstown Tunnel Construction (ECLC1-15)

MLA: Jumpei Yamashita Malcolm Sheehan Osamu Nishikokura Darrell Liebno Mechanized Tunnelling Driving Toronto’s Big Move - Eglinton–Scarborough Crosstown Tunnel Construction (ECLC1-15). Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2016.

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