Instant Tunnel Support In Soft Ground

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
W. Ter-Minassian
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
3
File Size:
162 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1997

Abstract

Besides the question of the stability of the roof and walls, one of the main problems encountered with tunnelling and shaft-sinking through the soft ground of alluvial origin forming the sub-grade of most large towns is settlement. Public transport and road tunnels in town centres are particularly affected, as they cannot generally be designed at any great depth for several reasons, such as the fact that ventilation shafts and access to the surface by means of stairs, escalators, lifts, ramps and so on must be fitted into the limited space available and are therefore costly, and because of the difficulties of driving below the water table. It is for this reason, coupled with the need for wide radius curves, that tunnels now so often pass close under buildings and monuments which must not be exposed to any risk of damage from subsidence during excavation. Grouting is the usual method used for consolidating soils, improving their strength and making them less compressible, but it is itself liable to cause heaving and cracks in the buildings above and has many other attendant dangers, including continually revised estimates which are the reason for the often inordinately high costs met with in urban tunnelling to-day. The mechanics of the problem have been studied and it has been found that a fraction of the total settlement is
Citation

APA: W. Ter-Minassian  (1997)  Instant Tunnel Support In Soft Ground

MLA: W. Ter-Minassian Instant Tunnel Support In Soft Ground. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1997.

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