Skip to main content

Cut and cover consolidation

Foundation specialist Forasol has developed an innovative technique for anchor drilling that is improving ground consolidation on road projects in Switzerland. The technique has been widely used on a number of highway projects in the country, including construction of a new 1.3km long cut-and-cover trench for the A9 highway in south western Switzerland.
July 10, 2012 Read time: 2 mins
RSSFoundation specialist 6159 Forasol has developed an innovative technique for anchor drilling that is improving ground consolidation on road projects in Switzerland.

The technique has been widely used on a number of highway projects in the country, including construction of a new 1.3km long cut-and-cover trench for the A9 highway in south western Switzerland.

A modified version of 6158 EGTechnology's largest foundation drilling rig is being used to drill and install high capacity anchors on this job, which is scheduled for completion in 2013. Using the patented Anchor-Jet procedure, Forasol has drilled and installed anchors to retain the trench's sheet steel pile wall. The trench is being excavated to a depth of 13m and the foundation base is supported by a jet grouting plug, which helps brace the bottoms of the sheet steel piles.

EGT redesigned its VD7800 vertical drill rig to Forasol's requirements, allowing the machine to drill horizontally with a 10-45º angle of inclination. As a result the 32tonne-class drill rig has allowed Forasol to install its patented anchor technology using long tieback anchors. The retaining work includes 4,000 anchors that measure from 16-35m in length, with load-bearing capacities of 700-900kN.

Conventional anchor drilling methods require drilling, inserting the anchor tendon and injecting the sealing cement and this whole process can take several days. However the Anchor-Jet system allows all the operations to be carried out in a single step that takes around an hour. Cable tensioning can then be carried out five days after installation and the company says that its technique vastly reduces the time needed for support work and helps cut overall project costs.

The Anchor-Jet system is claimed to offer 50% more retaining force than conventional techniques and allows engineers to cut the number of anchorage points required for a single job.

This procedure uses jet grouting of cement slurry at pressures of 400-600bars to produce an in situ concrete sealing bulb around the anchor tendon, and because the anchorage forces can be calculated beforehand, the system is also more predictable than conventional techniques, according to Forasol.

The soils at the A9 tunnel site did not suit the use of traditional anchors, and the project engineers wanted to avoid using internal bracings.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Upgrades by Power Pavers ensure old generation slipformer uses new Topcon machine control system
    July 1, 2013
    Upgrades to a slipform concrete paver built in 1999 allow it to use current technology. US firm Streb Construction has taken a novel approach to its paving fleet by upgrading a CMI paver built in 1999 to use modern machine control technology. The company bought the CMI SF3302 machine new and this piece of equipment had logged a high number of hours since its purchase. However the company realised that this proven piece of equipment could be made to operate more efficiently and productively, as well as more
  • Pavement preservation techniques
    February 16, 2012
    In this second article of a three-part series on pavement preservation, Alan S. Kercher, of Kercher Engineering, discusses the different techniques that can be utilised as part of the preservation toolbox
  • Pavement preservation techniques
    April 12, 2012
    In this second article of a three-part series on pavement preservation, Alan S. Kercher, of Kercher Engineering, discusses the different techniques that can be utilised as part of the preservation toolbox An agency should utilise a comprehensive preservation toolbox that includes various techniques, which can be applied to specific needs. There is no one technique that will cost-effectively address all pavement problems. However, there are many preservation techniques that can provide an agency with the ab
  • Brazilian contractor uses novel methods for high quality road
    January 5, 2015
    Cold-in place recycling method provides fast road rebuild in Brazil In Brazil a road contractor has carried out a high quality road rebuilding job, using novel techniques. Contractor Brown Brown is located in Santa Teresinha in the state of Bahia and recently carried out a two-week job for the company to rehabilitate sections of highway BR-381. The highway is an important route in Brazil and runs from Sao Paulo to Belo Horizonte. Highway BR-381 or Rodovia Fernão Dias, as it is called, stretches some 576km