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New Zealand: TBM prepares to bore under the harbour in Auckland for te new wastewater tunnel

    Steve McMillan
    By Steve McMillan

     

    Next week Watercare will start tunnelling a new harbour outfall at Clarks Beach as part of the southwest wastewater servicing scheme. This will improve the quality of the Manukau Harbour with significant benefits for the community and environment.

    On Monday, May 12 a 1.2-metre-wide tunnel-boring machine (TBM) will get the ground moving on the $22 million Clarks Beach Outfall wastewater pipeline.

    Programme delivery manager Dave Kennerley says the treated wastewater will be discharged approximately 100 metres into the Waiuku Channel  a highly dynamic part of the harbour where it will quickly disperse.

    The outfall is a crucial part of a wider programme of work that will support the projected population growth of Aucklands south-west which is expected to grow to around 30,000 people by 2050.

    Initially, it will carry highly treated wastewater from the Clarks Beach Wastewater Treatment Plant, which were currently upgrading. But it has been designed and sized to support future population growth in the wider area.

    Project manager Jason Salmon says the outfall installation is expected to take six or seven weeks.

    "To ensure the resilience of the outfall, the pipeline will be double layered.

    The carrier pipeline, which is made from high-density polyethylene, will sit inside a steel pipe to prevent any leaks or ground and seawater intrusion.

    To install the outfall the TBM will cut through the ground and install the exterior steel pipeline at the same time.

    Once its reached its destination, the carrier pipe will be pulled through and plugged until it is brought into service. A 66-metre-long diffuser will then be installed.

    The diffuser includes 22 rubber nozzles called duck bills, due to their shape resembling a ducks bill.

    The nozzle design allows the periodic release of treated effluent to flow out but stops sea water flowing in.

    Salmon says once the TBM finishes its journey it will arrive at a receiving pit 10 to 15 metres under the sea.

    The TBM will be lifted out by a team of divers who will unbolt it from the carrier pipe in the outfall, attach lift bags to it and winch it out on to a pontoon.

    Once its on the pontoon it will be towed to Onehunga Port and lifted back onto land.

    Update on Clarks Beach Wastewater Treatment Plant project

    The upgrade to the Clarks Beach Wastewater Treatment Plant introduces sophisticated technology that will allow the plant to produce exceptionally high-quality treated wastewater, which ultimately benefits the Manukau Harbour.

    It also supports population growth in Clarks Beach and Glenbrook Beach in the short term.

    Project manager Sophia Chan says work has progressed well with all the main tanks now on site and the civil construction of the inlet structure nearing completion. A new power supply has also been installed and fit-out has begun.

    source: Watercare.

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