HS2 engineers are celebrating completing a successful 8km tunnelling drive under the capital. The TBM, named Sushila, reached the Green Park Way vent shaft in Ealing on 19th December 2024, breaking through into a reception shaft filled with foam concrete.
The innovative method has been adopted due to high water pressure in the ground on the site. It allows the TBM to maintain its pressure while sealant can be applied from the tunnel lining to prevent water ingress. Once the reception can is depressurised, it will be opened and the TBM will be lifted out.
The 13.4km of twin-bored Northolt Tunnel is being constructed by a quartet of machines named Sushila, Caroline, Emily and Anne. They will complete the tunnel between HS2’s super-hub station at Old Oak Common, west London, and the outskirts of the capital at West Ruislip.
Sushila, named after a local school teacher, was the first to start and is the first to complete the journey. All four will finish their journeys at Green Park Way, arriving in a main and satellite shaft.
The Northolt Tunnel is being built by a joint venture formed of the companies Skanska, Costain and STRABAG (SCS). The same JV will also construct the Euston Tunnel eastward from Old Oak Common to the centre of London. The TBMs are made by Herrenknecht AG.
Each machine is lining the tunnels with pre-cast concrete tunnel segments, grouting them into place before moving forward at an average speed of 16m per day. Teams work around the clock below ground on the TBMs along with teams on the surface supporting them.
Launched in October 2022 from West Ruislip, TBM Sushila has excavated over 1.2 million tonnes of earth and installed 4217 tunnel rings. All the earth excavated by the machine has been placed in two areas west of the tunnel, eliminating the need to use public roads for lorry removal. These areas will be turned into wildlife meadows and wooded areas as part of HS2’s Green Corridor.
Macolm Codling, HS2’s Client Director for the London Tunnels, said: “This is our first breakthrough for the Northolt Tunnel and is the result of many years of hard work from our tunnelling contractor. We are on schedule to complete our first tunnel for HS2 trains under the capital by the end of 2025, just as we prepare to bring HS2 tunnels into the heart of the London at Euston.”
The TBM used for the excavation is 160m in length, with a cutterhead 9.84m in diameters. It weighs approximately 2,050 tonnes, roughly the weight of 10 blue whales.
James Richardson, Managing Director of SCS JV, said: “The arrival of Sushila at the Green Park Way ventilation shaft marks a huge step in the delivery of the Northolt Tunnel and the new railway. This achievement reflects the tremendous efforts of the entire team, which has drawn together global capability to deliver this incredibly complex section of work. We are making great progress on the remaining tunnelling, with three further TBMs in operation on the Northolt Tunnel and the two Euston Tunnel TBMs currently being prepared for launch.”
This is the fourth major tunnel breakthrough for HS2 this year. Tunnelling for both bores of the 16km Chiltern Tunnel, the longest on the route, was completed in March this year. A logistics tunnel which will be used to help facilitate construction of the Euston Tunnel from Old Oak Common station to Euston was completed in January this year.
At the budget in October, the Chancellor announced that the construction of HS2’s Euston Tunnel would go ahead. Earlier this month, HS2 revealed the two machines which are being assembled in the giant underground box at Old Oak Common station site, named Karen and Madeline
Herrenknecht
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