Segment Design for Exceptional Circumstances: Post Tensioning and Squeezing Ground - RETC2021

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 15
- File Size:
- 2868 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jun 13, 2021
Abstract
The LA Effluent Outfall tunnel is a 7-mile long, 18' internal diameter, secondary treated effluent discharge tunnel currently under construction by Dragados USA for the Los Angeles County Sanitation District No. 2 (LACSD). The purpose of this tunnel is to add redundancy and increased capacity for discharge of secondary treated effluent from the LACSD’s Joint Water Pollution Control Plant, located in Wilmington, California within Southern Los Angeles County. Current discharge from this facility flows through two existing tunnels of 8' and 12' horseshoe profile, constructed in 1937 and 1958, respectively. When the new tunnel is complete, it will add an additional capacity of 670MGD in peak wet weather flow conditions. Geology of the roughly 7 mile long tunnel was divided into six reaches by the contract documents. Tunnel Reaches (TR) 1 to 3, comprising 19,550' will be excavated in alluvial sands of the San Pedro and Lakewood formations, with cover ranging from 45 to 90 feet. In this reach the tunnel intersects the seismically active Palos Verdes fault Zone. TR 4 is a 1,600' transitional zone between alluvium and the rock formations of the Palos Verdes (PV) Hills, comprised mostly of Malaga Mudstone. TR’s 5 and 6 total 15,591', and are within the rock formations of the PV Hills with overburden ranging from 315' to 475'. The primary constituent of the PV Hills is Altamira
Citation
APA:
(2021) Segment Design for Exceptional Circumstances: Post Tensioning and Squeezing Ground - RETC2021MLA: Segment Design for Exceptional Circumstances: Post Tensioning and Squeezing Ground - RETC2021. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2021.