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London Tideway: TBM Rachel breaks through after 7 km journey from Fulham to Acton

Tideway TBM Rachel breakthrough at Acton

International arm BAM International of the Dutch construction company Royal BAM has released the following news:

TBM Rachel breaks through after 7 km journey from Fulham to Acton

28 September 2020 11:53 - BAM Nuttall Ltd

 

(Press release Tideway:) London, 24 September 2020 - A giant tunnel boring machine (TBM) building part of London’s new super sewer has today completed its journey, marking another crucial step toward a cleaner, healthier River Thames.

TBM Rachel has now finished tunnelling the western 7 km section of the main tunnel after breaking into the shaft at Tideway’s site in Acton.

Around 725,000 tonnes of spoil was excavated as part of the drive – equivalent to almost 60 times the weight of the UK’s tallest building, the Shard.

Neil Binns, Senior Project Manager, said: ‘Having broken through at Acton Storm Tanks, it’s easy to forget the time and effort that goes into making all this possible. From designing and manufacturing the TBM, to providing logistics support for its delivery by river, to the above-ground operation, as well as the skill of the tunnelling team – this is a fantastic achievement and a wonderful example of the teamwork required to clean up the River Thames.’

TBM Rachel first arrived in London in November 2017 – having travelled 750 km by river from the port of Kehl in Germany.

After careful assembly, the 1,350-tonne machine was lowered 35 metres into the ground and began tunnelling in May 2019.

Working a total of nearly 1,100 shifts, around 200 staff have worked on the western section of the tunnel, with Tideway’s use of the river to remove spoil and bring in concrete segment keeping around 25,000 lorries off the road.

Shirley Rodrigues, Deputy Mayor for Environment and Energy said: ‘This is a welcome milestone in London’s Tideway project. With recent reports that just 14 per cent of England’s rivers meet good status for water quality, this brings us a major step closer to a cleaner River Thames, hugely reducing the chances of sewage overflowing into the river. It will modernise our ageing sewage system and dramatically improve the environment.’

TBM Rachel was named after Rachel Parsons, who was the founding president of the Women's Engineering Society and a former Fulham resident.

Click here for the original press release.

[TBM Rachel has dug the western section of the Thames Tideway tunnel for the BMB joint venture of BAM Nuttall, Morgan Sindall and Balfour Beatty].

image is also of BAM/BMB JV

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