Skip to main content

Seattle’s Alaskan Way tunnel on track

Plans are on track for construction work on Seattle’s Alaskan Way tunnel to commence in mid-2013. The massive TBM that will drive the tunnel has been tested in Japan by its manufacturer Hitachi and is now being shipped to the US. The TBM has a 17.5m diameter cutting head, making it the largest machine ever constructed. This is bigger even than the Herrenknecht machine with its 15.62m diameter cutting head built for the Bologna-Florence highway tunnel project in Italy. The new Hitachi TBM has been disassembl
March 8, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
Plans are on track for construction work on Seattle’s Alaskan Way tunnel to commence in mid-2013. The massive TBM that will drive the tunnel has been tested in Japan by its manufacturer 233 Hitachi and is now being shipped to the US. The TBM has a 17.5m diameter cutting head, making it the largest machine ever constructed. This is bigger even than the 2592 Herrenknecht machine with its 15.62m diameter cutting head built for the Bologna-Florence highway tunnel project in Italy.

The new Hitachi TBM has been disassembled into different sections for transportation to the US and is expected to arrive at the end of March 2013. The launch area for the TBM is being prepared at present and the Alaskan Way Viaduct Replacement Tunnel is scheduled to open in late 2015. When complete the 3.2km tunnel will carry State Route 99 under Downtown Seattle from the SoDo neighborhood to South Lake Union in the north. 914 Washington State Department of Transportation’s US$1.35 billion project will replace the existing 1950s vintage viaduct, which was damaged in an earthquake in 2001. The tunnel will run at a depth of up to 61m beneath the city and will carry 110,000 vehicles/day while its construction also frees up the waterfront area for redevelopment.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Ageing Liberty Tunnels in US refurbished with hydrodemolition
    May 13, 2015
    Hydrodemolition surface preparation keeps Liberty Tunnel rehabilitation project on schedule in Pittsburgh. The Pennsylvania state Department of Transportation selected hydrodemolition surface preparation for the US$18.8 million rehabilitation of Pittsburgh’s Liberty Tunnels. Time was of the essence to complete the project on deadline without penalties and hydrodemolition was selected as it offered a fast and cost-effective method to prepare the tunnel walls for a new, shotcrete surface. This methods off
  • The world’s longest suspension bridge
    June 24, 2024
    The world’s longest suspension bridge is the 1915 Çanakkale Bridge in Turkey. This engineering marvel links Gelibolu with Lapseki, forming a key section of the 101km highway linking Malkara with Çanakkale. *Article produced in partnership with the General Directorate of Highways (KGM), Ministry of Transport and Infrastructure, Republic of Türkiye.
  • Mumbai’s new coastal transport link
    July 6, 2022
    Mumbai’s new coastal road presents an ambitious and challenging project that will help improve the lives of the city’s inhabitants - Mike Woof writes
  • Final touches for Seattle’s SR520 floating bridge
    November 21, 2017
    Construction crews in the US state of Washington are finishing bicycle trails and pedestrian paths leading up to the award-winning SR 520 floating bridge. The Evergreen Point Floating Bridge - officially now the Governor Albert D. Rosellini Bridge - carries Washington State Route 520 across Lake Washington in Seattle. The 2.35km-long floating span is the longest floating bridge in the world and at 35m the world's widest. It opened in April last year as a replacement for the original 50-year-old four-lane