The Civil Engineering Contractor August 2018 | Page 26

TECHNOLOGY "Tunnel boring machines (TBMs) are typically too expensive under South African conditions of abundant labour and scarce capital, and so a hybrid practice of part-mechanisation part-labour has emerged." That we are at an early stage is due primarily to economics and available land rather than skills or technology. It is not commonly known that the veritable maze that is the London Underground owes its existence, at least in part, to a brilliant South African-born railway engineer named James Henry Greathead. His ‘Greathead shield’, designed by him in 1869, was used in the completion of the Tower Subway, which ran under the River Thames, close to the Tower of London. It was circular in design and was advanced by screw jacks; the tunnel subsequently lined with cast- iron rings for support. 24 - CEC August 2018 If South Africans were integral to the emergent steps of underground infrastructure, they are just as integral today in the form of South African- born billionaire entrepreneur, Elon Musk. Safety, efficiency, versatility Underground construction in South Africa, for example in the pipe jacking industry, often involves human resources with handheld breakers for softer material, or rock drills where hard rock is encountered, and drilling and blasting is required. This is primarily because conventional excavation machinery will not fit in confined underground working areas. The problem with that is a person can only hold a hammer for so long. “A more specialised machine such as a Brokk demolition robot can do the work of 20 workers and doesn’t tire. The challenge is that so much more waste material gets dislodged at a quicker rate and then becomes a bottleneck unless the entire process of removal is simultaneously mechanised,” explains Robin Jackson, director of Demolition & Drilling Equipment. In circumstances where roof collapse is a possibility where it is not supported, a Brokk demolition robot becomes a necessary safety factor. In the event of a cave-in, only the machine is buried, with the operator holding a remote several metres behind and being safely surrounded by a concrete pipe with a steel shield in front. Such equipment is more expensive initially, but is usually cost effective for road tunnels, metros, and mining over the term of a specific project, says Jackson. Tunnel boring machines (TBMs) are typically too expensive under South African conditions of abundant labour and scarce capital, and so a hybrid practice of part-mechanisation part-labour has emerged: lesser mechanisation is employed, such as a drum cutter, rock splitter or hydraulic hammer, requiring a lot less upskilling, but which is less efficient than a TBM. Labour does the rest. “This is a lot cheaper because it requires one quick- but in urban design, to keep the earth’s surface relatively free. However, there are important funding issues which mitigate against underground construction. Van der Merwe points out: “The rule of thumb in engineering is that the ratio of constructing on ground is R1 compared to R10 for elevation above the ground and R100 for below ground.” From a cost point of view, building underground should always then be the last option in infrastructure. Lifestyle solutions must increasingly consider climate change and enable a form of urban development that supports the health and the well-being of urban dwellers in the face of increasing population pressure. In South Africa, this trend is in its embryonic stages. Buildings increasingly have multiple floors of underground parking, and it is close to a decade since we had the first underground ‘metro’ system in the form of the Gautrain. Jack van der Merwe, CEO of Gautrain Management Agency, is planning phase two of Gautrain. hitch machine such as a demolition robot with different heads. Unlike most machines, the Brokk comes with the quick-hitch standard,” adds Jackson. The softer the material the cheaper its removal by off-the-shelf tools without the need for drilling or blasting and can even often be removed by hand. “One prepares accordingly based on the geotechnical report,” Jackson says. At the extreme end of technological solutions is Herrenknecht AG, which has TBMs capable of boring 2.5–3m tunnels, but which is expensive and requires considerable time to set up the project. Apart from Gautrain and other transport tunnels such as Cape Town’s Huguenot Tunnel, Jackson describes tunnels in South Africa as being in the region of one to two- and-a-half metre in diameter and being constructed for water or utility services. One of the biggest recent and current tunnelling projects in South Africa involves the transfer tunnel being constructed as part of the Lesotho Highlands Water Project. This year sees the start of phase two of the water project; the first phase of which was completed in 2002. Phase two