Skip to main content

MAT Mischanlagentechnik debuts BE-2550 technology in Switzerland

The Bauer subsidiary MAT Mischanlagentechnik, known for microtunneling technology, has entered the large-diameter tunnelling market with its BE-2550 separating plant in Switzerland. The double-track Eppenberg tunnel in the Swiss canton of Solothurn is about 2.6 km long and is one of the busiest railway routes in Switzerland. Since November 2016, a 2,400tonne tunnel boring machine measuring around 115m long and 12.75m in diameter has been drilling through the mountain. The machine has been operating in the
April 12, 2018 Read time: 2 mins
For the Swiss Eppenberg Tunnel project, the entire six-unit BE-2550 separating plant was enclosed to cut noise and protect it against ice and snow
The 8350 Bauer subsidiary MAT Mischanlagentechnik, known for microtunneling technology, has entered the large-diameter tunnelling market with its BE-2550 separating plant in Switzerland.


The double-track Eppenberg tunnel in the Swiss canton of Solothurn is about 2.6 km long and is one of the busiest railway routes in Switzerland. Since November 2016, a 2,400tonne tunnel boring machine measuring around 115m long and 12.75m in diameter has been drilling through the mountain. The machine has been operating in the open mode hard rock until now; for the remaining 700m, the fluid-supported slurry technology will be used.

Since August 7, MAT Mischanlagentechnik has been using the BE-2550 – 22m long and 26m wide - for this last but crucial section of the tunnel which is due for a breakthrough this winter. The BE-2550 is made up of six adjoining and identical standalone plants of type BE-425-60 that can move around 2,400m³ of slurry hourly in a closed circuit system. The entire plant was enclosed to cut noise pollution and protect it against ice and snow. The bentonite slurry transports the excavated material continuously to the separating plant via a 3km pipeline. In the separation plant, the bentonite slurry is separated from the soil in multiple processes using screens and hydrocyclone. Thereafter it is once again fed into the slurry circuit and delivered to the TBM cutter head. Two SKC-60-K continuous mixing plants ensure continuous production of bentonite slurry.

Logistics has been a crucial success factor, according to the company. On site, all necessary tools, machine components and construction site equipment, as well as qualified personnel, had to be in the right place at the right time for assembly and commissioning.

Factory acceptance testing took place in Immenstadt, where 25 trucks were loaded in only five working days. Commissioning was done in Switzerland, where every truck arrived at the construction site as scheduled.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • A European Deere?
    July 4, 2018
    Iconic US manufacturer John Deere is back in Europe, thanks to its purchase of Wirtgen. David Arminas looks at what’s in store The gods were smiling on the Wirtgen Group for the company’s Road Technology Days 2018 event. This year it was held in summer-like weather at the recently expanded Voegele plant near Mannheim in Germany. Within days in northern Europe the season dramatically changed from dreary chilly late winter to glorious high temperatures, just in time to bathe the amassed demonstration equi
  • Liebherr and Sandvik add to machine fleets for construction operations in Germany
    February 9, 2017
    For more than six months, German contractor Jens Weiss has been using Sandvik’s new surface drilling rig Ranger DX800, with noted low fuel consumption per metre drilled. The Ranger DX800 is a hydraulic, self-propelled, self-contained, crawler-type surface drilling rig. It is equipped with Sandvik-designed safety features to bring it into line with EU standard EN 16228. Typical applications are road cutting, pipeline drilling and foundation drilling, as well as production drilling in medium-size quarries.
  • Key expressway route through Hunter Valley
    November 11, 2013
    Australia’s Hunter Valley will benefit from a new high speed expressway, which is currently under construction - Simon Gould reports Located two hours north of Sydney, the Hunter Valley region in New South Wales is one of Australia’s largest producers of coal and wine. With international demand, particularly from Asia, for both continuing to increase, a significant upgrade of infrastructure was required between the region and the port of Newcastle, the world’s largest coal export port. However the strict en
  • Brisbane’s new airport link is an engineering success
    April 12, 2013
    Financial troubles for Brisbane's new Airport Link overshadow its construction success – Adrian Greeman writes. Political argument and legal dispute is likely to rage for some time yet over the bankruptcy of Australian road operator BrisConnect, which went into receivership this February with A$3 billion in debt. Toll paying users for its new Airport Link have been less than half the predicted numbers since it opened in July last summer. But if its nancial engineering is being questioned, the same is not t