Skip to main content

Testing and striping underway for Seattle’s Alaskan Way tunnel

Crews have been working flat out on the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle to install and test thousands of components and 90 interconnected systems. The client, Washing State Department of Transportation, said that Seattle Tunnel Partners began installation inside the double-deck State Route 99 tunnel in March after crews completed construction of the upper and lower roadways. STP said that testing could be complete by as early as late September and the tunnel could open as soon as this fall after an ap
August 31, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
Testing, testing: Seattle Tunnel Partners making sure that equipment and signage operates effectively in the soon-to-open Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle (photo courtesy WSDoT)
Crews have been working flat out on the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Seattle to install and test thousands of components and 90 interconnected systems.


The client, Washing State Department of Transportation, said that Seattle Tunnel Partners began installation inside the double-deck State Route 99 tunnel in March after crews completed construction of the upper and lower roadways.

STP said that testing could be complete by as early as late September and the tunnel could open as soon as this fall after an approximate three-week viaduct closure to realign the  SR 99 – called the Alaskan Way - into the new tunnel.

The project is called the Alaskan Way Viaduct Replacement Project after the section of SR 99 in Seattle called the Alaskan Way, a street running along the seafront. Part of the Alaskan Way is an aging 3.2km viaduct – opened in 1953 - which is being replaced by the 2.7km tunnel almost directly beneath it. This will free up waterfront area for major inner city development (see World Highways, %$Linker: 2 Internal <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 2 33214 0 link-external key project report false /categories/road-highway-structures/features/bertha-ends-her-alaskan-way-voyage-in-seattle/ false false%>, November 2017).

The multi-layered tests of the tunnel's operational and safety systems includes pre-functional tests to ensure working of individual equipment such as a sprinkler head. Functional tests check that the equipment works together as a system, for example multiple sprinklers. Finally, integrated testing checks that multiple systems function together - heat detectors and video cameras operate with the fire suppression system.

Striping of the road decks inside the tunnel is also continuing. The stripes separate a deck into two 3.3m lanes, a 2.4m shoulder on the left side and a 0.6m buffer on the right.

Kiewit Infrastructure West has started traffic signal, striping and roadway signage work to switch traffic on Alaskan Way from under the viaduct to the west of it. The viaduct will eventually be demolished after the tunnel is opened likely this fall.


Tunnel boring was completed last year by Bertha, the world’s largest diameter earth pressure balance tunnel boring machine at the time, with a cutterhead diameter of 17.5m. By the end of last year it had been dismantled, job completed.

Seattle Tunnel Partners - a joint venture of New York-based 4761 Dragados US (a subsidiary of Dragados, the construction division of ACS Group of Spain) and the general contractor Tutor Perini Corporation, based in California.

Apart from designing and building the tunnel - and owning Bertha - STP is responsible for building highway ramps and other connections at the north and south ends of the tunnel. STP is also constructing permanent buildings at the north and south portal to house lighting, ventilation and other essential tunnel systems

For more information about the Alaskan Way Viaduct Replacement Program, see the website:

%$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 link-external www.alaskanwayviaduct.org false http://www.alaskanwayviaduct.org/ false false%>

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Fayat Group to acquire Terex Roadbuilding assets
    February 11, 2013
    The Fayat Group intends to buy a number of assets from CMI Terex from its road building operations. The purchase agreement covers acquisition of certain product lines in North America, and the road building operations of Terex in Brazil. This deal will be a significant breakthrough for Fayat’s road machinery subsidiary BOMAG as well as the mixing plant business unit operations Marini Ermont. “The addition of these product lines enhances the position of the Fayat Group as the only full liner in road building
  • VIDEO: Car owner’s manual – chapter one, snake removal
    October 26, 2016
    Snakes can get into the darnedest places, such as your car. The issue then becomes how to get it out. The answer is, with a lot of work and care as well as an equal amount of patience, such as possessed by the man in this video shot somewhere possibly in Southeast Asia Getting a small snake out of a car is tough. Getting a large one out is practically impossible - at least extracting the reptile in one piece and alive is.
  • Brazil: contractors fear more layoffs as DNIT fails to pay up
    November 25, 2014
    The head of Brazil’s association of road constructors has warned of more layoffs unless the National Department of Infrastructure and Transport (DNIT) starts paying its contractors. Jose Alberto Pereira Ribeiro, president of ANEOR – National Association of Road Works - said companies already have been forced to lay off around 1,700 workers in light of non-payment by the government. Another 950 employees are on forced holidays. Ribeiro claimed DNIT failed to meet its financial obligations for September
  • Rema Tip Top conveys new products
    April 9, 2013
    Rema Tip Top, focussing on service know-how, has further extended its comprehensive portfolio of industrial applications and now offers both the design and production of Remawell sidewall conveyor belts. These special conveyor belts, constructed from the components (basic belt, sidewalls and cleats) permit the transport of all kinds of bulk material. The three components taken together give a defined transport volume that is constant even if the conveyor routing is vertical or skewed, thus ensuring a consta