Skip to main content

Tuen Mun to Chek Lap Kok Tunnel project

It is not only the scale of the Tuen Mun to Chek Lap Kok tunnel that impressed delegates but the number of novel technologies that Dragages Hong Kong, a Bouygues Construction subsidiary, is employing on this project. The 4.6 km tunnel running 60m below sea level is part of a strategic new route linking Hong Kong’s airport on Lantau Island and the New Territories. Dragage’s contract includes reclamation of 16.5-hectares at the tunnel’s north end to accommodate the north portal and a ventilation building. Wo
December 22, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Pipe jackling method for cross-passages (Photo courtesy Dragages)

It is not only the scale of the Tuen Mun to Chek Lap Kok tunnel that impressed delegates but the number of novel technologies that Dragages Hong Kong, a Bouygues Construction subsidiary, is employing on this project.

The 4.6 km tunnel running 60m below sea level is part of a strategic new route linking Hong Kong’s airport on Lantau Island and the New Territories. Dragage’s contract includes reclamation of 16.5-hectares at the tunnel’s north end to accommodate the north portal and a ventilation building. Work started in 2013 on the nearly US$2.4 project and is due to run until 2018.

979 Bouygues’ tunnel technical director Bruno Combe told the conference that Dragage cut months from the construction schedule by changing the method of tunnel construction beneath the reclaimed area from cut-and-cover to bored. Since this section of the tunnel must accommodate three lanes of traffic in each of the twin tubes rather than two, Dragages used the world’s largest TBM, with a diameter of 17.6m – bigger than Bertha, the machine which creating the Alaskan Way Viaduct replacement tunnel in the US city of Seattle.

After initial larger sections of tunnel were completed, the Herrenknecht-made TBM was converted to a 14m-diameter machine to dig the southbound tunnel while another 2592 Herrenknecht 14m machine is creating the northbound one. The machines require frequent replacements of cutter tools as it makes its way through granite and decomposed granite before getting into softer materials.

Dragages is using its Mobydic system that employs sensors in the disc cutters to take measurements such as speed of rotation and temperature of the discs. As well as indicating disc wear, the information provides insight into the type of rock through which the TBM is churning.

Another Bouygues remote technology, Snake, uses an exploration arm equipped with a high-pressure jet to clean the tools making them ready for inspection and possible replacement. Perhaps the most impressive for delegates was the use of the Telemac, a heavy robotic arm to change cutter tools.

Human intervention is also required to change tools. Because tunnel pressures are high due to the water above it and the fractured rock - up to 6 bar - specialist tunnelling divers must do the work. They remain in pressurised containers on the surface and are shipped to the cutter head in pressurised shuttles. This avoids divers having to go through several compression and decompression cycles during a shift if needed. Apart from saving time, is also lowers health risks associated with the cycles.

Equally as challenging technically is construction of 56 cross-tunnel passages for which Dragages and Herrenknecht devised special 3.85m-diameter mini-TBMs, or pipe-jacking machines. When combined with launch frames, they can cope with the high pressures. To date the contractor has constructed six cross passages using this method.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Tunnelling technology award for Herrenknecht 
    October 26, 2022
    Herrenknecht has received the bauma Innovation Award 2022 in the Machine Technology category, for a new development in continuous tunnelling.
  • Zaxis-5s biggest-ever project
    January 27, 2014
    Norwegian contractor Carl C Fon has secured its largest-ever road construction contract to complete a 4.6km section of the E18 in the Mysen region of its home country. It started the €25million project in August 2012 and it is scheduled for completion in the summer of 2014.
  • China looks to the future with major highway plans
    February 15, 2012
    China is still moving ahead with plans that will give it the world's biggest highway system. Patrick Smith reports. As China's economy grows even more, keeping the country on the move has become a priority for the government. While the country has made great strides over the past decade in improving its infrastructure, the number of vehicles has also increased rapidly, and in some instances restrictions have been placed on them.
  • US city of Vancouver approves new I-5 bridge
    July 18, 2022
    Vancouver in the US state of Washington and Portland in the state of Oregon are aiming for a new road bridge with the possibility of accommodating light rail transport.