Tunneling
on the Tren Urbano Project, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Michael Gay
Project Sponsor, Kiewit, Kenny, Zachary (KKZ)
G. Rippentrop
Project Manager, Kiewit, Kenny, Zachary (KKZ)
W.H. Hansmire
Principal, Jacobs Associates
V.S. Romero
Project Manager, Jacobs Associates

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The new Tren Urbano heavy rail transit project in
San Juan, Puerto Rico has one very significant part, the Río Piedras
Contract, being constructed underground. This paper will give an overview
of the tunneling work that started construction in 1997. Design-Build
procurement for tunneling is addressed.
The new and modern transit system in San Juan will be 17.2 km (10.7 mi)
long and have 16 stations in its first segment of construction, which
is due to open in 2001. The line connects the city center district of
Santurce to the outlying suburban municipality of Bayamón. All
construction is being done under design-build contracts as a demonstration
project funded by the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the Federal Transit
Administration (FTA).
The Río Piedras Contract is completely underground and involves
practically all types of construction in soft ground. One station is built
as cut-and-cover at the University of Puerto Rico. One portion has twin
tunnels to be driven with an Earth Pressure Balance Machine (EPBM) and
lined with one-pass precast concrete segments. Another has four short
tunnel drives at a turnout that will be constructed with an initial support
of shotcrete and lattice girders (i.e., the New Austrian Tunneling Method
of construction). The most complex construction is the Río Piedras
Station, which is being built as a stacked drift with a total of 15 individual
tunnel drifts. After being sequentially excavated and concreted, they
will form the arch of the 19 m (62 ft.) wide by 16 m (53 ft.) high cavern
station. This structure is excavated in soil with less than 5 m (16 ft.)
of cover to overlying historic buildings.
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