Rosslyn Station, Virginia: Geology, Excavation And Support Of A Large, Near Surface, Hard Rock Chamber

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Carl G. Bock
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
19
File Size:
1016 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1974

Abstract

INTRODUCTION Rapid transit systems involving near surface tunneling in hard rock are becoming more numerous, especially along the northeast corridor of the East Coast. Tunneled systems are under construction in Washington, D.C. and are being planned for Atlanta, Buffalo and Baltimore. Near surface tunneling is defined for this paper as being that in which the crown is 100 feet or less below ground surface. For Rosslyn Station, the total cover ranged from 52 to 70 feet. The rock cover, however, ranged from 40 to 50 feet which is slightly less than the station height and about two-thirds of its width. Rosslyn Station (Fig. 1) is the only station excavated completely in hard rock in the Virginia portion of the 98.5 mile Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority's (WMATA) rapid transit system. The station site, oriented in a north-south direction beneath a main thoroughfare and flanked by multistory office buildings, was fixed by the need to serve a dense population center at a specific location and geologic conditions were a secondary consideration in siting. There was no previous underground rock excavation in the Washington Metropolitan Area of the size and scope of Rosslyn Station that offered a practical case history guide to the geologic conditions and excavation problems to be encountered. GEOLOGY The regional geology of the Washington Metropolitan Area is divided into two physiographic provinces by the northeast trending Fall Line (Fig. 2). Northwest of this boundary is the Piedmont Province
Citation

APA: Carl G. Bock  (1974)  Rosslyn Station, Virginia: Geology, Excavation And Support Of A Large, Near Surface, Hard Rock Chamber

MLA: Carl G. Bock Rosslyn Station, Virginia: Geology, Excavation And Support Of A Large, Near Surface, Hard Rock Chamber. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1974.

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