Skip to main content

TBMs cut routes through Wuxi

Often used in road construction in China, eight Herrenknecht tunnel boring machines (TBMs) have now excavated almost 16km of tunnel in 20 months. The machines mastered challenging tunnelling stretches with small overburdens, crossing beneath the emerging metropolis of Wuxi, eastern China, to excavate the first two metro lines in the 3,000-year-old town on Taihu Lake, near Shanghai. Lines 1 and 2, with a total length of 58.5km, are expected to start operation in 2014. A total of five metro lines are planned.
May 29, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
The tunnels going through the city of Wuxi
Often used in road construction in China, eight 2592 Herrenknecht tunnel boring machines (TBMs) have now excavated almost 16km of tunnel in 20 months.

The machines mastered challenging tunnelling stretches with small overburdens, crossing beneath the emerging metropolis of Wuxi, eastern China, to excavate the first two metro lines in the 3,000-year-old town on Taihu Lake, near Shanghai. Lines 1 and 2, with a total length of 58.5km, are expected to start operation in 2014. A total of five metro lines are planned.

The eight Earth Pressure Balance Shields (Ø 6,370–6,390mm) from Herrenknecht have tunnelled through the underground since July 2011 to construct the lines. S-730 TBMs with a top performance of more than 33m/day and 164m/week completed their mission with the breakthrough, excavating a diameter of 6.39m.
Thus, 2,508m of tunnel for metro line 2 was built in only ten months.
Before that the machines also mastered challenging tasks when constructing the metro tunnels for line 1. The S-663, a compact Earth Pressure Balance Shield with a diameter of 6.37m, drove only a few metres beneath residential and commercial buildings, achieving breakthrough late last year.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • India plans major infrastucture investment
    April 5, 2012
    India says it turned its Commonwealth Games into a world-class success, and now it aims to do the same with its infrastructure. Patrick Smith reports On October, 2010 India put itself on the world stage, and disaster appeared to loom as a catalogue of problems dogged its biggest ever sporting event. Costing nearly US$2 billion to stage, the most expensive Commonwealth Games ever were, according to some, in doubt. After years of planning some projects were incomplete, there were health scares and a br
  • Runway resurfacing in Sardinia with Wirtgen machines
    December 7, 2017
    The fleet used comprised two Wirtgen W 210s and one W 200i, as well as two Wirtgen WR 2000 soil stabilisers. Located roughly 8 km north-west of the city of Alghero, Alghero-Fertilia Airport is one of three commercial airports on the Italian island, along with Cagliari Elmas and Olbia. Built as a military airport in the late 1930s, Alghero-Fertilia still occasionally handles military aircraft. However commercial flights represent its main traffic and as it serves the provinces of Sassari and Oristano, it is
  • Herrenknecht delivers small diameter shaft drilling solution
    January 6, 2017
    Herrenknecht has developed a boxhole boring machine (BBM), based on its proven microtunnelling pipe jacking technology. The BBM1100 has been designed to drill slot holes and inclined shafts with a diameter of up to 1.1m and a maximum length of 30m. The machine uses a compact crawler base, with a modular jacking frame, cable drum and power pack that can be positioned separately if required.
  • Herrenknecht delivers small diameter shaft drilling solution
    April 14, 2013
    Herrenknecht has developed a boxhole boring machine (BBM), based on its proven microtunnelling pipe jacking technology. The BBM1100 has been designed to drill slot holes and inclined shafts with a diameter of up to 1.1m and a maximum length of 30m. The machine uses a compact crawler base, with a modular jacking frame, cable drum and power pack that can be positioned separately if required.