New Cutter Soil Mixing (CSM) Technology Used To Construct Microtunneling Shafts For Mokelumne River Crossing

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 13
- File Size:
- 462 KB
- Publication Date:
Abstract
A part of the East Bay Municipal Utility District?s Folsom South Canal Connection Project, 430 feet of raw water pipe was installed using micro tunneling beneath the Mokelumne River. The access shafts for this crossing were constructed 50 and 35 feet deep through very dense sands and soft sandstone and siltstone. High groundwater and the immediate source of recharge from the river required watertight shaft construction methods. The shaft contractor, Drill Tech of Antioch, CA, used a brand new Bauer cutter-soil mixing (CSM) rig to construct the large shafts. The structural concept is similar to secant piles, but instead of creating cylinders of soilcrete, the CSM rig creates interlocking rectangular panels. This technology has been used previously in Europe, Asia, and Canada, but this was the first project to use CSM technology in the United States. Cutter-soil mixing technology has other applications beyond shaft construction, including retaining wall construction and levee reinforcement.
Citation
APA:
New Cutter Soil Mixing (CSM) Technology Used To Construct Microtunneling Shafts For Mokelumne River CrossingMLA: New Cutter Soil Mixing (CSM) Technology Used To Construct Microtunneling Shafts For Mokelumne River Crossing. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration,