Conference Proceedings
Tenth Australian Tunnelling Conference
Conference Proceedings
Tenth Australian Tunnelling Conference
Tunnelling in Hong Kong Towards the Millennium
Hong Kong continues to display a remarkable enthusiasm for undertaking ambitious tunnelling schemes despite apparent recessions in the Asian economy. This paper provides an outline of tunnel projects currently under construction, those recently tendered and a glimpse of the extent of forthcoming projects which, according to Government sources, carry a price tag of HK$ 200B._x000D_
Committed works will cost about HK$ 15B and involve a variety of TBM and drill and blast tunnels. These include the recently tendered works for KCRC's West Rail and MTRC's Tseung Kwan O railway extension, together with five no retendered TBM drives for the Strategic Sewage Disposal Scheme (SSDS) following forfeiture of the works by the Campenon Bernard-Maeda JV in mid-1997. The JV claimed unreasonable specifications leading to unacceptable levels of water inflow and dangerous working conditions._x000D_
Key technical issues that are now arising in Hong Kong are: the general use of design and build contracts for bored tunnel contracts; a trend to accept TBM options for relatively short drives in urban areas; the use of fixed-price' contracts which in the current competitive market, can encourage tenderers to take contractors to take very high risks; and the difficulty of predicting and managing water inflows in rock tunnels._x000D_
This paper also includes a new empirical method of predicting water inflows in rock tunnels, and makes recommendations for managing these on-site.
Committed works will cost about HK$ 15B and involve a variety of TBM and drill and blast tunnels. These include the recently tendered works for KCRC's West Rail and MTRC's Tseung Kwan O railway extension, together with five no retendered TBM drives for the Strategic Sewage Disposal Scheme (SSDS) following forfeiture of the works by the Campenon Bernard-Maeda JV in mid-1997. The JV claimed unreasonable specifications leading to unacceptable levels of water inflow and dangerous working conditions._x000D_
Key technical issues that are now arising in Hong Kong are: the general use of design and build contracts for bored tunnel contracts; a trend to accept TBM options for relatively short drives in urban areas; the use of fixed-price' contracts which in the current competitive market, can encourage tenderers to take contractors to take very high risks; and the difficulty of predicting and managing water inflows in rock tunnels._x000D_
This paper also includes a new empirical method of predicting water inflows in rock tunnels, and makes recommendations for managing these on-site.
Contributor(s):
I McFeat-Smith
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- Published: 1999
- PDF Size: 0.186 Mb.
- Unique ID: P199901057