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Swoop
4th August 2006, 11:05
Todays Harold. Acoustic testing chambers for bikes are being built for us!!!

Friday August 4, 2006

It was hole-through time for Auckland's new northern gateway yesterday, as cheering tunnellers broke into daylight on the $365 million Orewa-to-Puhoi motorway project.

A final layer of rock shredded away like confetti as a 50-tonne boring machine corkscrewed out of the southern side of Johnstones Hill above the Waiwera River, leaving a 333m long cavity for the first of a pair of sophisticated motorway tunnels.

The tunnels are costing $35 million to dig and fit out with lighting and ventilation systems at the northern end of the 7.5km toll motorway extension from Orewa.

The project will also include three sweeping viaducts across steep and bush-clad terrain inland from the Hibiscus Coast.

Transit New Zealand and its construction partners promise that once complete in about 18 months, the twin tunnels will form an impressive northern gateway to Auckland, while leaving an important wildlife corridor largely intact on the hill between Waiwera and Puhoi.

That is in contrast to an earlier and cheaper plan, which Transit eventually ditched as environmentally unacceptable as well as physically problematic, for an open cut 60m deep through Johnstones Hill.

Although a laser guidance system on the electrically driven boring machine left little risk of navigational errors for yesterday's hole-through, Northern Gateway Alliance tunnels manager Tony Pink admitted some relief when it emerged "exactly where we wanted it to".

"And the biggest thing is that we did it with no injuries," he said.

The machine, which began its subterranean journey 5 1/2 months ago after completing a toll tunnel beneath central Sydney, will be overhauled before starting the second tunnel in a fortnight.

Conventional earth-moving machinery still has to scrape out the bottom half of the initial tunnel, to form an opening 12m wide and 9m high, for two lanes of southbound traffic.

The second tunnel - 15m to the west - will be the same size but available initially to only one lane of northbound traffic.

That is to ensure vehicles reduce speed before they reach the end of the motorway and are faced again with the old highway carrying just one lane of traffic each way, without separation by median barriers.

Traffic will have two dedicated lanes in each direction along the rest of the motorway, including a 537m viaduct being built over the Waiwera River to connect to the tunnels.

The viaduct will rise to 30m above river level, and the initial tunnel opened up yesterday will provide a haulage road to build its northern abutment.

Project officials say this will reduce the area of bush that would otherwise have to be cleared to create a construction road along the river.

SIZING THEM UP

* Twin tunnels, to be extended to 345m long after portals added. Both 12m wide and 9m high, the tunnels will be set 15m apart, although connected by an emergency passage.

Southbound traffic will have two lanes in the eastern tunnel, but its twin will provide only one lane for northbound traffic until the motorway can be extended even further north, past Puhoi.

The project is Transit's first major underground project since Wellington's 435m Terrace Tunnel was built almost 30 years ago.

That is one impressive toy for digging holes!!!
Next useage shoud be for building an underground railway around Auckland...

ManDownUnder
4th August 2006, 11:08
Next useage shoud be for building an underground railway around Auckland...

Cool huh?

But undergrounding of transport around Auckland would take long term planning, budgetting and vision. Just beacuse the rest of the world has been doing it successfully for years, that doesn't mean we should consider it here....

Swoop
4th August 2006, 11:12
...would take long term planning, budgetting and vision.....
Yup, 3 things kiwis lack.

tomthepohm
4th August 2006, 11:17
Rail way, Auckland, are you mad, thats like forward thinking or something....

You would have though they would have built one 40 years ago

ManDownUnder
4th August 2006, 11:31
Rail way, Auckland, are you mad, thats like forward thinking or something....

You would have though they would have built one 40 years ago
They blody tried... reserved land for it etc... turned them into parks until the population got to a point where it would be feasible and pay for itself....

And now those parks are being turned into roads.

Brilliance - absolute brilliance. Again - just because the rest of the world has been successfully doing this for years...

sAsLEX
4th August 2006, 12:33
Cool huh?

But undergrounding of transport around Auckland would take long term planning, budgetting and vision. Just beacuse the rest of the world has been doing it successfully for years, that doesn't mean we should consider it here....

Should see the behemouth they are building under Kuala Lumpar *sp* it houses two roads decks and a water diversion deck as well, and when more water needs to be diverted they close the two road decks and put the watrer through there as well, makes our tunnel look like a 3 year olds attempt in a sand pit just quitely.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SMART_Tunnel

tomthepohm
4th August 2006, 12:36
Haha, true that Lex, Little old NZ aye.

You should go through some of the bad boys in the Alps, they are massive, and dont forget the tunnel from Blighty to Frog land.

McJim
4th August 2006, 13:03
At least it's a start - one day there will be a six lane motorway from Kaitaia to Wellington with wide curves, smooth straights and low accident numbers. Auckland will have full mass transit systems via rail, bus lanes and traffic control systems.......and pigs will be seen cruising at 35,000 feet.

Macktheknife
4th August 2006, 13:37
At least it's a start - one day there will be a six lane motorway from Kaitaia to Wellington with wide curves, smooth straights and low accident numbers. Auckland will have full mass transit systems via rail, bus lanes and traffic control systems.......and pigs will be seen cruising at 35,000 feet.
I didn't know that EAGLE 1 went that high?

McJim
4th August 2006, 13:49
I didn't know that EAGLE 1 went that high?
Thanks Mack - I knew someone would make that reference.

sAsLEX
4th August 2006, 14:01
Haha, true that Lex, Little old NZ aye.

You should go through some of the bad boys in the Alps, they are massive, and dont forget the tunnel from Blighty to Frog land.

And the tunnel machine they are using there looks pretty weak compared to the bigger ones, the one in KL was fourstories in diameter and a few hundred metres long.


The tunnels on the exhaust of Manapouri Hydro station are pretty impressive, as is the main gallery etc carved out of the rock esp when you note how long ago most of the work was done and the numbers that died on construction.

McJim
4th August 2006, 15:44
That is one impressive toy for digging holes!!!
Next useage shoud be for building an underground railway around Auckland...
Nah mate..I've booked it for the sandpit at my son's 3rd birthday party.

Magua
4th August 2006, 15:55
What's the projected timeframe for the completion of the motorway?

MattRSK
4th August 2006, 17:14
Next useage shoud be for building an underground railway around Auckland...

I think they should use it next to dig a big hole, then throw all the politicians in it!

McJim
4th August 2006, 17:16
I think they should use it next to dig a big hole, then throw all the politicians in it!
Nah mate - landfill has proven that chucking rubbish in a hole in the ground is a waste of time....all the hot air still leaks out.

Macktheknife
4th August 2006, 17:29
What's the projected timeframe for the completion of the motorway?
Late 2007/08 somewhere around there I think. I will be happy to get most of the traffic out of a nice bit of riding road myself.

Gremlin
5th August 2006, 03:17
Does anyone else see how congested the end of the motorway will be?? 3 lanes to 2 lanes.... to 1.... riiiiight. :weird: Lets hope the little cagers keep sitting in traffic, leaving the nice roads for us.

Swoop, I do love how you referred to the tunnels... its sooo true. Imagine proper tunnels, not the little underbridges... :devil2:

Swoop
5th August 2006, 14:30
Swoop, I do love how you referred to the tunnels... its sooo true. Imagine proper tunnels, not the little underbridges... :devil2:
..... time for new pipes perhaps?............:blip: :first:

Gremlin
5th August 2006, 17:33
..... time for new pipes perhaps?............:blip: :first:
Have a muzzy with (I guess) no packing already... the underpass doesn't last long enough :weep:

The Pastor
5th August 2006, 20:59
They blody tried... reserved land for it etc... turned them into parks until the population got to a point where it would be feasible and pay for itself....

And now those parks are being turned into roads.

Brilliance - absolute brilliance. Again - just because the rest of the world has been successfully doing this for years...

A few of the old buildings in the cbd have access to a proposed underground railway system. It would be bloody cool. Not as cool as a flying railway though....