Rehabilitation of an 1880s Limestone Block Tunnel Below an Active Railroad Corridor

Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Jim Herber Joseph Welna Nathan Campeau Anna Eleria
Organization:
Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
Pages:
7
File Size:
4837 KB
Publication Date:
Jun 13, 2021

Abstract

Constructed by stonemasons over 120 years ago, a portion of the Trout Brook Storm Sewer Interceptor (TBI) owned and operated by the Capitol Region Watershed District in Saint Paul, Minnesota, needed rehabilitation. A routine inspection of the 10-foot limestone block tunnel revealed degraded and missing mortar between the blocks, allowing significant infiltration and soil migration through the tunnel joints. Conditions, including damaged and missing blocks, were considerably worse in a 250-foot-long segment beneath a busy mainline railroad corridor. Barr’s solution included tuck-pointing to repair the mortar joints, shotcrete overlay, and construction of a hybrid cast-in-place/shotcrete “tunnel within a tunnel” to support the mainline railroad loads.
Citation

APA: Jim Herber Joseph Welna Nathan Campeau Anna Eleria  (2021)  Rehabilitation of an 1880s Limestone Block Tunnel Below an Active Railroad Corridor

MLA: Jim Herber Joseph Welna Nathan Campeau Anna Eleria Rehabilitation of an 1880s Limestone Block Tunnel Below an Active Railroad Corridor. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 2021.

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