Skip to main content

Ulma in Poland’s S7 tunnel

Construction of Poland’s longest road tunnel is progressing with an MK Formwork Carriage system from Spanish manufacturer Ulma.
October 22, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
After pouring each 6.25m section, the carriage was easily advanced with a hydraulic system (photo courtesy Ulma)

The S7 Expressway crosses Poland from Lubien´ to Rabka Zdrój, north to south, passing through the Voividato Malopolskie region. Three sections are under construction.

One of these sections goes through Lubon´ Maly mountain, for which a tunnel with two separate tubes is being built - a total length of over 4km. This phase has proven to be the most time-consuming and costly of the entire Expressway project. There are two independent tubes, approximately 2km each, designed for traffic to flow in a single direction.

The tunnel will feature two emergency passageways between the tubes and a ventilation room, as well as technical and service installations. In order to build it, 1,922m have been perforated for the left-hand tunnel and 1,919m for the right.  

Excavation began on the north side of the right-hand tube in March of 2017. Completion of the entire tunnel is expected by mid-2021.

Ulma’s Engineering Team designed an MK Formwork Carriage 15.5m wide and 10.7m long to pour the mine tunnel. With a single unit made from standard MK pieces, the carriage was adapted effortlessly to the tunnel’s complex geometry.

For the roof, a special panel was designed to be load-bearing during the pour and permit easy stripping without the need for hydraulic systems. TMK Formwork Panels provided an excellent finish, according to the manufacturer. The carriage boasts a high load-bearing capacity, working platforms, access stairways and other integrated safety features.

Due to the excavation clearance, the characteristics of the project and the variety of tasks that had to be performed simultaneously, the complete assembly of the carriage was carried out in sections, pre-assembled on the outside and moved inside the tunnel tubes.

After pouring each 6.25m section, the carriage was easily advanced with a hydraulic system that facilitated formwork placement and stripping, lowering, and levelling, as well as advance.

 

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Bridge project uses high performing formwork
    February 20, 2012
    Doka designed and supplied a high-performing formwork technology solution for a challenging bridge project south of the German town of Halle. The 8,614m long single-cell box girder superstructure of the Saale-Elster Viaduct, with a typical cross section width of 13.9m, is borne on 220 piers, and has a constructional depth of 4m. It is mainly being erected on launching girders to minimise the impact on flora and fauna.
  • World’s largest bridge deck for KAIA expansion
    December 16, 2013
    A bespoke formwork solution from RMD Kwikform is playing a key role in creating the largest ever airport cast bridge deck as part of the multi-billion dollar expansion of King Abdulaziz International Airport near Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The firm is also a leading player in the creation of arterial tunnels under the airport’s elevated roads, another key part of the project’s first phase works due for completion in 2014. Guy Woodford reports
  • Tunnel essential to reduce congestion
    February 21, 2012
    Vietnam's Ho Chi Minh City's dense population, which was estimated to be 10,680 persons/km2 in 2005, is, over the next ten years, set to benefit from the completion of the Thu Thiem Urban Area project, which will provide homes for up to 200,000 people.
  • Rising to the challenge
    July 18, 2012
    Visualise today's concept of a major commercial traffic corridor in the western United States. A roadway responsible for delivering goods to Arizona, Nevada and Utah, that also connects Mexico to the United States to Canada through the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). What springs to mind? A multi-lane highway carrying thousands of vehicles a day past cities at speeds up to 113km/hour, while egress ramps make sure vehicles get safely to city streets and their final destination. This is not the c