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Herrenknecht TBM Gets Ready To Drill Lake Mead

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Southern Nevada's newest piece of mega-hardware—a custom, $25-million Herrenknecht tunneling boring machine—makes its long-awaited underground debut later this year.

Photo courtesy SNWA
Crews prepare the underground chamber to advance the TBM.
Photo courtesy SNWA
Crews assess the shaft to ensure enough clearance for the first section to be lowered.
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The machine works like a giant mechanical earthworm, gnawing through dirt, rock and muck, forming a protective tunnel that will eventually channel raw Colorado River water onto nearby treatment plants before being pumped to homes and businesses throughout the Las Vegas valley.

The 1,800-ton, 600-ft-long TBM is the workhorse of a $526.6-million third raw-water intake tunnel project at Lake Mead, 30 miles southeast of Las Vegas. A joint venture of S.A. Healy Co., Lombard, Ill., and Impreglio S.p.A., Sesto San Giovanni, Italy, known as Vegas Tunnel Constructors LLC, is the design-build contractor. The additional intake is needed because the lake has dipped 100 feet since 2000 amid a decade of drought and boom growth. 

The TBM will carve out a 3-mile-long, 20-ft-dia reinforced tunnel under Lake Mead that draws water at 860 feet. That is deeper than the other two intakes, which may soon become inoperable if water levels continue to fall. The drill head, which rotates in 16 different positions, is already underground. The 5-piece TBM should be fully assembled by early December, with commissioning to follow. 

Herrenknecht’s Schwanau factory in southern Germany took 17 months to design and manufacture the machine, which was shipped in five large pieces to California’s Long Beach Harbor and then transported to the jobsite outside of Boulder City, Nev., in 61 truckloads. The transportation feat took months of planning and coordination, mapping out the route and securing special heavy-haul permits. 

An intake starter tunnel flooded three times in six months in 2010, prompting the construction team abandon its original alignment and drill in a drier direction, roughly 23° northeast from the problematic tunnel along a ½° uphill slope. The move increases project costs 15%, and pushed the completion date back two years to 2014. 

As it stands, the TBM is being lowered piecemeal down a 30-ft-dia., 600-ft-deep access tunnel using a headframe-gantry system with dual 200-ton strand jacks. It took crews 32 hours to lower the 315-ton drill head alone. 

“There was only 3 to 4 inches clearance on either side,” explains Jim Nickerson, VTC deputy project manager. 

Components will make their way down to a 200-ft-long, 37-ft-high assembly vault that will act as a fore bay upon project completion. Segments will then slide over a 360-ft-long, 3-ft-deep concrete trench using a 400-ton hydraulic jacking frame. Once assembled, a dozen people will operate the 6,000-hp, non air-conditioned TBM, including a mechanic and electrician. Tunnel temperature is about 90° F, with high humidity. 

The caterpillar-type machine will run 24 hours a day, moving up to 40 feet per 8-hour shift, barring any mechanical downtime—VTC has about $2 million in replacement parts onsite. 

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