Skip to main content

Building the Pfänder tunnes

The second tube of the Pfänder Tunnel, Bregenz, Austria, where the new main tunnel has been excavated using a tunnel boring machine (TBM), is being constructed by Alpine BeMo Tunnelling. Tubbings have been installed as the inner tunnel lining, and as part of concreting for the inner shell, the FQ 1 crosscut, suitable for vehicles, is being constructed using a tunnel formwork carriage designed and supplied by PERI.
April 11, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
The high proportion of system components provided a cost-effective solution for the short tunnel structure
The second tube of the Pfänder Tunnel, Bregenz, Austria, where the new main tunnel has been excavated using a tunnel boring machine (TBM), is being constructed by Alpine BeMo Tunnelling.

Tubbings have been installed as the inner tunnel lining, and as part of concreting for the inner shell, the FQ 1 crosscut, suitable for vehicles, is being constructed using a tunnel formwork carriage designed and supplied by 298 PERI.

The existing Pfänder Tunnel, commissioned some 30 years ago, cannot cope with the increase in the traffic volumes, so the parallel, two-lane tube is being constructed. Over 14 months, the almost-12m diameter TBM drilled 6,600m through the Pfänder Mountains to form the main tunnel, which was lined with precast segments.

In case of fire, 31 connecting passageways between the old and new tunnel tubes for evacuation purposes are planned. For the most important, the 43.1m long FQ 1 crosscut, PERI created a tailored formwork solution consisting mainly of rentable VARIOKIT system components. The other crosscuts will have shotcreted inner shells.

A total of seven round-shaped wall formwork elements were prefabricated by PERI and supplied just-in-time to the construction site, thus minimising assembly time. After only 1.5 weeks of on site assembly, the construction tea

started work on the segments, with standard lengths of 5.9m. After a short period of introduction, a three day cycle could be achieved for these sections. Construction of the last two 3.35m long segments required two days respectively.

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.
  • Czech bridge sees world formwork debut
    July 23, 2012
    The Czech government is investing heavily in upgrading and modernising the country's top-tier transportation infrastructure. This year alone, building works with a total investment of over E1.6 billion are planned or underway on the Czech motorway and main road network. Completion of the D8 motorway between the Czech capital Prague and Dresden in the east of Germany has a high priority, and as part of this large-scale project, the contracting consortium of SMP and Metrostav is erecting the 585m long Prosmyk
  • Major project to construct landmark Bay Bridge in California
    October 31, 2012
    Iconic California crossing will offer seismic safety – Adrian Greeman reports A unique single-span single-tower suspension bridge is the iconic centrepiece of a dramatic renewal of the eastern Bay Bridge in California, crossing from San Francisco to Oakland. Tourists in San Francisco sometimes mix up their bridges, identifying as the famous Golden Gate, the double suspension bridge which runs across the wide San Francisco Bay. These serially linked bridges in fact form the Bay Bridge east to Oakland whereas
  • The concrete plan for drilling
    July 9, 2018
    Four tips for optimising concrete dowel drill performance - *Rick Walstad, E-Z Drill Inc president and CEO