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ENGINEERS AUSTRALIA ENGINEERING EXCELLENCE AWARDS Level 2 Joint Entry of: Perth New MetroRail City Project – Soilfrac Compensation Grouting to mitigate settlement induced damage to buildings due to tunnelling For the Category of: Project Awards: Small Business Ventures/Projects & Reports Entered by: Keller Ground Engineering Pty Ltd Leighton Kumagai Joint Venture Pty Ltd GROUND ENGINEERING Principle Entrant: Keller Ground Engineering Pty Ltd Level 1, 4 Burbank Place Baulkham Hills NSW 2153 Joint Entrant: Leighton Kumagai Joint Venture 1 Altona Street West Perth WA 6005 Contact: Oliver Batchelor Tel: 02 8866 1155 Email: [email protected] Contact: Matt Williams Tel: 08 9324 1166 Email: [email protected] CONTENTS Soilfrac Compensation Grouting enabled two 6.9m diameter tunnels to be drilled less than 6m below the shops, offices and restaurants of central Perth without the general public being aware of the works” GROUND ENGINEERING Executive Summary page 1 Description of Entry page 2 Control Systems & Review page 15 Resources page 20 Referees & Project DVD page 25 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Soilfrac Compensation Grouting was used to allow the driving of tunnels without impacting on services and structures above the line of new MetroRail tunnels in Perth CBD. The design and implementation of the system was executed by close co-operation of Keller’s engineers in Sydney supporting LKJV onsite in Perth. The project demonstrated excellence by: Performance - ensuring structures were unaffected by • tunnelling. Community Focused - Ensuring no disruption to the local • community and continuous unhindered use of properties in a complex and congested urban environment. Innovation – the technique combined traditional grouting • techniques with sophisticated monitoring and control. Communication - achieving the project requirements through • close co-ordination and communication between numerous stake holders and participants. GROUND ENGINEERING Safe - the work was completed with an unblemished safety • record due to the development of numerous new safe working practices to take account of the new methods and techniques being performed. page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY BACKGROUND The Public Transport Authority (PTA) of Western Australia awarded the $330m tender for the design, construction and maintenance of the New MetroRail City project to the Leighton Kumagai Joint Venture (LKJV), a joint venture between Leighton Contractors and Kumagai Gumi of Japan. Left: Ground Displacements due to tunnelling Above Right: Aerial photograph of the Gold Group Buildings GROUND ENGINEERING The project involved the construction of 1.5km of underground rail lines and two new stations and presented a wide range of engineering challenges. A prime challenge was to ensure that the tenants trading in the city were not inconvenienced or buildings were not damaged by the boring of two 744m long, 6.9m diameter tunnels through the water bearing sandy soils beneath Perth’s city centre. The contract was administered by New MetroRail, a projectspecific office established by the PTA. The tunnel alignment was primarily below roads and rail reserves, however in order to link in with a new underground station the tunnels passed below four buildings whose foundations were only 6m above the tunnel crown. The four buildings on William Street, identified as the “Gold Group” due to their importance to the project, presented significant challenges in identifying a protection measure that could be implemented without disrupting the occupier’s business, pedestrian access or road traffic flow and ensuring the integrity of the buildings and services. page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY BACKGROUND CONTINUED The Gold Group Buildings, occupied by shops, offices and fast food outlets, covered an area of approximately 2000m2 and consisted of four structures varying between two and six storeys, some with basements and a combination of concrete raft, concrete strip and brick foundations. The maximum magnitude of settlement due to tunnelling operation was predicted to be of the order of 20mm, this, combined with the varied foundation systems, the tunnel skew and the partial undermining of the buildings presented the greatest risk of damage due to differential movements and their likely impact on the buildings and the trading activities therein. The soil conditions below the buildings consisted of loose to medium dense Sand with the groundwater level only 3.0m below ground level. This meant that the full magnitude of settlement from the tunnelling operation would occur within hours of the tunnelling advancing below the building. LKJV engaged Keller Ground Engineering (KGE) for the design, installation and operation of a Soilfrac Compensation Grouting System for the protection of the Gold Group buildings with the following other organisations in supporting roles.: Ryan & Hill – undertaking building condition surveys and • Airey protection assessments – Preparation of LKJV’s Ground Settlement, Building • Geoconsult Protection and Repair Plan Spatial Solutions – Instrumentation installation and • Fugro monitoring system and personnel, with supply of instrumentation by ITM soils and Slope Indicator. Requirements The requirements of the works were to ensure that the buildings were maintained in continuous unhindered operation with no significant damage resulting from the tunnelling works. In addition the protection works should have minimal disruption possible to the roads, buses, pedestrians, and building tenants as well as the daily life of Perth’s residents. Initial discussions between Keller Ground Engineering and Leighton Kumagai JV (LKJV) were page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY BACKGROUND CONTINUED focused on conventional techniques to support the buildings (as summarised in Table 1) each method presented their own specific challenges however the common problem was one of access and minimising disruption. Keller subsequently proposed the use of Soilfrac Compensation Grouting (Soilfrac). The benefits of the system soon became apparent, the principle benefit was that it allowed the protection works to take place from a one central location without the requirement to access the properties and in any way impact on its users. In addition Soilfrac Compensation Grouting provided a flexible approach to protection by controlling the settlement on a real time basis as opposed to installing structural support or mass ground treatment that would have been designed and installed for the worst case settlement/damage profile. Table 1: Possible methods for Gold Group building protection Method Technical Confidence Access Stakeholder Disruption Overall LKJV/Program Impact Underpinning, e.g. piles etc Low (need to review structures) Difficult (basements occupied, major bus route outside) Significant (Need to move tenants out of basements) None (but negotiation required with building owners) Grout block to prevent soil movement installed from ground or basement High Difficult (basements occupied, major bus route outside) Significant (Need to move tenants out of basements) None (but negotiation required with building owners) Grout block to prevent soil movement from TBM High Possible None Significant Propping Low (damage may still occur) Difficult High None (but negotiation required with building owners) Reinforce the building structure Low (damage may still occur) Difficult High None (but negotiation required with building owners) Ground Improvement Structural protection Compensation (during or after settlement) GROUND ENGINEERING Grouting from tunnel Low Good Minimal Slight Compensation Grouting High Reasonable Minimal None (if access shaft can be negotiated) page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY BACKGROUND CONTINUED To undertake the protection of the Gold Group by Soilfrac Compensation grouting required creating a shaft in the middle two lanes of William Street and have regular monitoring surveys undertaken on the buildings and footpaths around. Hence, the following stake holders needed to be liaised with on a continuous basis: • PTA and LKJV management • LKJV tunnelling operations to determine progress • City of Perth about permitting and minimising disruption • Transperth for the bus scheduling • Owner’s representatives for the four Gold Group buildings • All of the tenants of the Gold Group buildings The general public (accessing the buildings, walking along • William Street), and • The general public road traffic that used William Street. Leighton Kumagai gained confidence in the Soilfrac Compensation Grouting technique through demonstration of Keller’s experience in the method overseas and in the capability of their locally based engineers. This confidence allowed them to jointly promote the method to the PTA and the project stake holders through a series of presentations and complimentary reports. GROUND ENGINEERING page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING THEORY Soilfrac Compensation Grouting involves the injection of grout into the ground between a structure and the tunnel during tunnelling. Whilst the implications of high pressure grouting have been known since the early 20th century they have more often been regarded as a limitation of the grouting technique, associated with uncontrolled heave with related damages to services, structures and pavements. They were only grouped and applied to the challenge of settlement mitigation for tunnelling in the late 1980’s. A large-scale trial of the technique was performed in London Clay in advance of London’s massive Jubilee Line Extension project in 1992. The success of the trial lead to its adoption on large sections of that project to protect buildings and structures overlying the proposed excavations and subsequent acceptance of the method in cohesive soils. Soilfrac is a development of conventional permeation grouting which utilises the normally undesired effect of hydro-fracture to form a compensatory lens of grout in the soil thereby balancing the ground loss due to tunnelling and maintaining the overall soil balance between the tunnel and the ground surface. GROUND ENGINEERING Above Middle: Schematic showing grout fractures from a TAMP pipe Above Right: Insitu grout fractures emanating from a TAM pipe in clay The mechanism of hydro-fracture and subsequent ground movement have been described in some detail by a number of authors including Linney & Essler (1992) and Essler, (1998), a brief summary of this mechanism follows. In cohesive soils, conventional permeation grouting is not possible due to the soil pores being too small for cement particles to enter the flow paths between the soil particles. page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING THEORY If the grout is pumped at sufficient pressure, the overburden pressure is exceeded parting the soil and a fracture of grout forms in the soil matrix. Repeated grout fracturing results in initial consolidation of the soil followed by ground heave. This initial phase of repeated injections to consolidate the soil is termed ‘conditioning’. Soilfrac Compensation Grouting has been performed in cohesive soils with some regularity on major European tunnelling projects in the last 15 years. The use of the technique in the granular soils, as found below the Perth CBD, has been carried out much less frequently with only two documented examples. Injection of a cement suspension grout into granular deposits will not form a hydrofracture until the soil pores have been ‘choked’ or filled and the soil pre-grouted with a grout that is of sufficiently low strength to ensure hydro-fracture grouting can subsequently take place. It is against this background that the Soilfrac technique was promoted, adopted and implemented in Perth. In order to facilitate the repeated injections of grout below isolated sections of a structure the Soilfrac method uses a special grout injection tube called a ‘Tube-a-Manchette’ or TAM pipe. The TAM pipe consists of a steel or plastic pipe with injection holes or ports drilled at approximate 0.5m centres. The injection holes are covered with a rubber sleeve which acts as a simple non return valve. A double packer is inserted down the pipe and the packer rubbers inflated either side of the injection port to allow an isolated injection of grout. The pressure of the grout inside the TAM expands the rubber sleeve and allows grout to flow into the soil at the required location, when the pump pressure ceases the rubber sleeve contracts and prevents grout flowing back into the pipe. The system allows repeated injections of grout in precise locations. GROUND ENGINEERING The hydro-fracture grouting is carried out in a pre-determined zone of ground between the tunnel and the ground surface. The location of the hydro-fracture zone is determine by considerations such as the overburden pressure, the proximity to the tunnel and potential for grout flow into the TBM and the geology. page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING DESIGN Design The central feature of Soilfrac is that it is a bespoke method, designed and implemented on a project specific basis. The design and operation is as much affected by the buildings to be protected, the tunnelling operation and the access limitations as by the geology and settlement characteristics of the soils and the soil structure interaction with the structures and services above. Accordingly the design of the system for the Perth MetroRail was developed in close co-operation and consultation between Keller’s Sydney based engineers and LKJV’s site staff over a period of approximately eight months prior to commencement of any activities on site. A number of differing access scenario’s were investigated and designed with options of subterranean access from basements in neighbouring buildings considered, as well as shallow excavations in William Street. The final access opted for was a shaft excavated within William Street that only required the closure of one lane and enabled all operations to be carried out remote from and without interference to the activities of residents and users of the protected structures. Steel TAM pipe with rubber sleeve Packer inside a cut away TAM pipe GROUND ENGINEERING Double Pneumatic Packer page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING DESIGN Once the working area is established, the principle factors to consider in design are the magnitude of settlement expected and the rate at which the settlement will occur. The greater the magnitude of settlement the closer the frequency of TAM pipes required. High rates of settlement require greater rate of injections (no. of sleeves injected per hour) and hence a greater requirement for grouting and monitoring resources. The design of the system was carried out by Keller’s engineers based on their personal experience overseas aligned with that of Keller worldwide. A peer review procedure was adopted with an independent expert in the field, with Mr. Robert Essler, one of the pioneers of the system providing this review from the UK. Above Left: Final position of Access Shaft in William Street GROUND ENGINEERING Above Right: One of the considerations for installation of TAM pipes The final design comprised the installation of 57 No. TAM pipes, each approximately 40m to 50m long. The frequency of the TAM pipe sleeves was approximately 1 sleeve per metre squared with a redundancy/precaution of 100% built into the system should unexpectedly large settlement occurs in an isolated location or if sleeves should become blocked following repeated use. page DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING INSTALLATION Installation The TAM’s were installed by means of a cased drilling system requiring accurate drilling to lengths of up to 50 metres. A duplex drilling method was considered the most appropriate for providing the necessary accuracy on the final TAM location and preventing structural movement due to ground loss during the installation. A purpose built drill mast was fitted to a turntable which in turn was bolted to the concrete base of the shaft to provide a stable drilling platform. When the drill mast was orientated to the correct azimuth for a drill position, hydraulic jacks would lock the mast against the wall of the shaft at the back and front of the mast itself to maintain its orientation during the entire drilling and installation procedure. Bentonite slurry was used as the flushing medium which also acted as a natural lubricant to prevent frictional resistance as the drilled casings were advanced below the buildings. The Bentonite was recycled within the site set-up area after separation of the drilling cuttings. This system minimised the volume of drilling spoil that had to be removed from site. The duplex drilling system consisted of an outer casing of 114mm diameter and a 76mm diameter inner rod. Left: Plan indicating TAM arrangement below buildings together with work compound in William Street and tunnel alignment. page 10 DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING INSTALLATION During the initial installations the TAM’s were surveyed using a GIRO borehole survey tool. The survey tool had an accuracy of +/-50mm in 50m which allowed the final TAM locations to be plotted in plan and elevation to acceptable limits. In the initial surveys of the TAM installations two TAM pipes were found to have deviated unacceptably close to the proposed tunnel bore and it was concluded that every borehole would be surveyed prior to the TAM installation. The drilling equipment was mobilised to site at the beginning of July 2005 and drilling works were completed in early October 2005. In total 57 No. TAM pipes were installed with a total length of 2,400m. Above Left: Works Compound in William Street GROUND ENGINEERING Above: Installation of the TAM pipe in drilled hole. Note the red caps covering previously installed TAMs. page 11 DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING CONDITIONING Grouting The grouting works were carried out in two phases. Firstly the conditioning phase, in which the soil in the Soilfrac zone is progressively grouted and fractured to a point where movement is observed at surface, followed by the Active phase where the grout is injected in response to structural movement observed by the monitoring systems to control building movements to within specified limits during the advance of the tunnels under the building. Conditioning grouting phase The condition phase was carried in a number of passes. The initial passes were carried out over the whole of the TAM array as a general “background tightening” operation. Subsequent grouting passes were targeted at areas beneath the structures within the zone of influence from the predicted settlements from the building risk assessment. There were 3,042 sleeves available to the grout engineer which could be used to inject grout and control soil/structural behaviour. GROUND ENGINEERING Above: Placing the packer and grout injection from within the shaft During the conditioning phase an average uplift across the building of 3mm was targeted. Using information and experience of similar projects in Europe the injection treatment was planned on theoretical injection volumes. Volumes and pressures were then adjusted in response to the soil/structural behaviour observed through the monitoring system. page 12 DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING CONDITIONING The grout used consisted of a cement/bentonite blended grout. The grout was mixed in a high shear colloidal mixer to ensure that a stable grout was mixed. Standard QA controls comprising tests for specific gravity, flow, bleed and strength were carried out on the grout during the injections. Prior to commencing the conditioning phase a small scale verification procedure was performed to demonstrate that the system was working adequately. The procedure involved a series of injections to carry out a controlled heave of part of the structure. The tunnel lining designer’s questioned the potential risk of excessive pressure on the tunnel lining from the active phase grouting operations carried out concurrent with the tunnel construction. Pressure dissipation trials were carried out on a number of sleeves and TAM pipes during the initial phase to assess the time lag for pressure stabilisation in the system on completion of a grout injection pass. The pressure was recorded in real-time using the grouting computer with the pressure found to drop to below 50% within two to three seconds then tail off fully after approximately 30 seconds. Although the pressure dissipation trials revealed no long term excessive pressure it was considered prudent to introduce a grouting exclusion zone around the TBM. This exclusion zone would provide safeguard against the potential risk of excessive pressure on the lining and possible grout migration from the active phase grouting zone into the head of the TBM. An injection pressure limit was also put in place with all sleeves within two metres of the TBM path and constructed tunnel lining. The placement of an exclusion zone around the head of the TBM meant that it would be impossible to grout in the desired location until the TBM progressed past this point, as such the methodology was amended to allow for a controlled pre-heave of the structures by approximately 3mm which would act as a buffer until the compensation grouting could commence upon TBM advancement. GROUND ENGINEERING Above: Verification results indicating controlled heave by rejected injection During the grout injections for each grout pass the grouting engineer reviewed the real-time monitoring data of the building to gauge page 13 DESCRIPTION OF ENTRY ACTIVE SOILFRAC COMPENSATION GROUTING the reaction of the building to the injection. The initial uplift of the structure was generally followed by a small relaxation of the movement. Both the initial and second pass had similar volumes of grout injected. The initial movement was approximately 1.3mm with the second pass provided approximately 1.6mm. A third pass was carried out with half the volume of grout. The key observation from this pass is that no relaxation took place within the structure on completion of the grouting. This indicated that any subsequent grouting would induce uplift within the structure. Figure X shows a contour plot of the variability of grout volume injected to achieve the final conditioning. Active grouting phase The first tunnelling drive below the buildings commenced in January 2006, the second drive taking place in August 2006 each drive taking approximately two weeks to complete. During the tunnelling period the grouting operations, consisting of observation of movement and subsequent grout injection to compensate for the settlement, were carried out on a continuous round the clock basis by Keller’s core team of engineering staff who temporarily re-located from Sydney. Between the tunnel drives the shaft in William Street was capped and normal traffic movement was maintained. The outcomes of Active grouting phase are described in detail in the section of this report entitled Control Systems & Reviews. References L.L. LINNEY AND R.D. ESSLER: ‘Compensation Grouting Trial Works at Redcross Way, London’, Grouting in the Ground Conference ICE, 1992. R.D.ESSLER: ‘Control of settlement by Compensation Grouting, Jubilee Line in London’, Big Digs around the world 1998, ASCE National Convention, Boston, ASCE Geotechnical Special Publication No. 86. GROUND ENGINEERING Above: Relief plot showing grouting intensity in conditioning phase page 14 CONTROL SYSTEMS & REVIEWS Risk Category Description of Degree of Damage Description of Typical Damage and Likely Forms of Repair 1 Very slight Fine cracks easily treated during normal redecoration. Damage generally restricted to internal wall finishes Perhaps isolated slight fracture in building. Cracks in exterior brickwork visible upon close inspection. 0.1 to 1 0.05 to 0.075 2 Slight Cracks easily filled. Redecoration probably required. Recurrent cracks can be masked by suitable linings. Exterior cracks visible: some re-pointing may be required for weathertightness. Doors and windows may stick slightly. 1 to 5 0.075 to 0.15 3 Moderate Cracks may require cutting out and patching. Tuck pointing and possibly replacement of a small amount of exterior brickwork may be required. Doors and windows sticking. Services may be interrupted. Weather tightness often impaired. 5 to 15 or a number of cracks greater than 3 0.15 to 0.3 Above: “Building Damage Classification” (from Burland et al., 1977 and Boscardin and Cording, 1989) Approx Crack width (mm) Max Tensile Strain (%) Specification & Objectives The performance requirement of the protection system was to maintain the incremental damage to within the “slight” damage classification as described in the criteria established from Burland et al., 1977 and Boscardin and Cording, 1989 and as summarised above. This was interpreted to achieve the following goals: • Limit settlement of an individual footing to 10mm • Limit differential settlement across the building to 1 in 500, and • Limit the heave to less than 5mm. page 15 CONTROL SYSTEMS & REVIEWS MONITORING & REVIEW Monitoring Review Soilfrac Compensation Grouting is an observational method which uses the observed results of the previous actions to determine the next action, as such the instrumentation and monitoring is a critical component. A combination of instrumentation devices was used to provide a complete picture of the buildings’ movements. These were: prisms read from robotic theodolites on the building • Optical facades every hour electro-levels spanning inside the buildings along • Wireless columns and transverse to the tunnels measured at two minute • • intervals; Building settlement points (pins and retro/photogrammetry targets). Surface settlement points. In addition to the instrumentation placed on the Gold Group buildings, two deep settlement arrays were installed within 50 metres of the first building to accurately determine the size and characteristics of the tunnel settlement trough. The array consisted of combinations of: settlement points which were reinforcing bars drilled and • Deep grouted 1m below the ground; • Rod extensometers; inclinometers fed back wirelessly into the monitoring • In-place system; and • Other surface and building settlement points. To coordinate the compensation grouting, a specific Building Protection team was created with key personnel from the monitoring, tunnelling and compensation grouting operations together with overall management coordination. The conditioning phases provided the team with information on pressures and volumes during each grout injection. GROUND ENGINEERING Robotic theodolite layout and visibility of building facades from each Two dedicated teams of surveyors ran a swing shift to provide twice daily manual readings at around 12 hour intervals. These manual surveys provided verification and a baseline for the wireless electronic monitoring devices. page 16 CONTROL SYSTEMS & REVIEWS REVIEW Review Above: Flow Chart of Information and Planning Meetings for Soilfrac Compensation Grouting In order to ensure that the active grouting could be correctly implemented the grouting engineering personnel were given access to the real-time monitoring and structural monitoring systems operated by LKJV. In addition continuous updates of the TBM’s location were provided by the TBM driver who notified the Keller Grouting engineer as they were pushing and building each individual tunnel ring. Keller plotted the movement of the TBM complete with the TBM exclusion zones in order to facilitate the grouting operations. page 17 CONTROL SYSTEMS & REVIEWS CONTINUED A meeting between key management personnel from the TBM, monitoring and grouting operations was held twice daily to provide updates of the TBM progress, monitoring data and grouting analysis for the previous 12 hours. These meetings also allowed review of the next 12 hours work including any additional monitoring requirements and proposed grouting plan. The information from the monitoring and TBM allowed KGE to tailor the grouting program based on the observed movements. Outcome & Results The conditioning phase raised the structures by approximately 3mm and maintained the angle of distortion well within acceptable limits. As the TBM approached the Gold Group buildings the actual settlement being observed was much less than the system was designed to handle. This information was converted to a volume loss from tunnelling and in conjunction with the grout efficiency determined from the conditioning phase allowed a lower intensity of grouting to be planned for the active phase. The active grouting plan was reassessed on an ongoing basis in response to the observed movement of the buildings. The active phase of the compensation grouting operation started when the TBM face was within the influencing distance to the first encounter structure. To achieve the aim of the active phase of keeping the structure within acceptable limits, only a small amount of grouting was carried out. The settlement plot (left) details in real-time the movement of the structure and the corresponding grouting carried at the time as the TBM passed through an area. The grouting program was designed to limit the settlement to back to normal background structural levels not keep the structure at the post conditioning elevation. The active phase was carried out for both running tunnels. GROUND ENGINEERING Above: Anticipated settlement without Soilfrac and Actual Settlements achieved. page 18 CONTROL SYSTEMS & REVIEWS CONTINUED Conclusion This application of Soilfrac and the combination of instrumentation was a unique and innovative solution to the protection of the Gold Group buildings. Such an operation could have only been achieved with the close consultation of all parties involved within an “integrated” environment, rather than a simple subcontract for construction services. Despite the constraints of the site, compensation grouting with the high level of monitoring yielded a highly successful result. For the successful implementation of this compensation grouting system, there were at least 30 people involved from a number of organizations in the design, instrumentation, construction of the shaft and TAM arrays, grouting operations, 24 hour site supervision, monitoring surveys, plus engineering and management reviews. Right: showing profile of grout volume injected as the TBM progressed in the active phase GROUND ENGINEERING Their combined commitment to maintaining open lines of communication produced the results described here. Soilfrac Compensation Grouting enabled two 6.9m diameter tunnels to be drilled less than 6m below the shops, offices and restaurants of central Perth without the general public being aware of the works” page 19 RESOURCES Organisation The various organisations who worked together to make the project the success it was include: • Public Transport Authority (PTA) - owner • Leighton Kumagai JV – principal contractor Ground Engineering (KGE) – Design, installation and • Keller operation of a compensation grouting system Spatial Solutions – Instrumentation installation and • Fugro monitoring system and personnel • ITM-Soils – Supply of wireless electrolevel beams • Slope Indicator – Supply of subsurface instrumentation Ryan & Hill – Undertaking building condition surveys and • Airey protection assessments • Geoconsult – Preparation of LKJV’s Ground Settlement, Building Protection Plan – Lead design consultant for tunnels and below ground • Maunsell structures – sub consultant to LKJV for geotechnical, • Geoconsult dewatering, temporary works design, and building protection design • SKM/SMEC – Design verifiers GROUND ENGINEERING page 20 RESOURCES CONTINUED People The following people were the key or lead people involved in the compensation grouting works: Matt Williams (Special Contracts Manager, LKJV) – Related role included overseeing all building protection and monitoring works, including the establishment of the initial contract with Keller and subsequently with Fugro, ARH, ITM and Slope. Ran the daily compensation grouting management review meetings. Oliver Batchelor (Concept Development, KGE) – Proposal and development of the conceptual solution, including promotion of the Soilfrac concept to LKJV and PTA. Chris Nobes (Technical Specialist, KGE) – Development of the conceptual plan to detailed design stage and implementation thereof based on specialist knowledge and previous experience of compensation grouting. Responsible for the performance of the compensation grouting works in compliance with specification. Simply put, the person who would have shouldered the responsibility had it not complied. Jon Stretch (Operations Manager, KGE) – programming of the inter-related aspects of the installation and grouting works and implementation of safe works practices. Peter McGough (Senior Geotechnical Engineer, LKJV) – Overseeing of all instrumentation and monitoring systems on the project, including design, managing monitoring, reviewing and interpretation of all monitoring data collected (versus design predictions). GROUND ENGINEERING Ritchie Mulholland (Chief Monitoring Surveyor, Fugro Spatial Solutions) – Responsible for installing and ongoing operation of all instrumentation and monitoring systems on the project, including scheduling the personnel for manual surveys and ensuring consistency and timeliness of the results. page 21 RESOURCES CONTINUED Henry Yamazaki (Tunnelling Manager, LKJV) – Responsible for tunnelling operations, including providing feedback.on operational status, and making modifications as shown by the monitoring interpretation. Eric Hudson Smith (Geotechnical Manager, PTA) – Oversaw all geotechnical, environmental, building protection and monitoring matters on behalf of the owner. Another 20 people were involved in the design, instrumentation installation, construction of the shaft and TAM arrays, grouting operations, 24 hour site supervision, monitoring surveys, plus engineering and management reviews. GROUND ENGINEERING page 22 RESOURCES PLANT AND EQUIPMENT The installation and implementation of the Soilfrac Compensation Grouting system required various items of specialist plant and equipment that were not available in Australia nor available as an ‘off the shelf” product overseas. In addition, given the limited time scale from instruction to carrying out the works, significant items of specialist plant had to be procured, assembled and commissioned as part of the overall project process. Drilling With limited space available for a working compound in William Street and the restricted shaft diameter a specialist drilling mast was custom built in Italy to Keller’s specifications. The mast was fitted with a rotary-duplex head and powered by a specially modified remote hydraulic power unit necessitated by the site restrictions and the need to maintain clean air conditions in the bottom of the shaft during operations. A rotary duplex drilling system was utilised to maintain directional stability in the variable soils with the added advantage of minimal over break to avoid settlement. Grouting A key requirement of the grouting process is that each grout injection is individually controlled to ensure that fracture occurs and that design pressure and volume limits are not exceeded which otherwise might have the potential to cause uncontrolled movement. All grouting records are electronically collated for monitoring and interpretation by the grouting engineer to enable the appropriate grout parameters for future grout injections. In order to control and record the number of injections required on a grouting project of this scale it is necessary to use a micro-processor controlled and recorded grouting unit. With this equipment not available as a standard unit Keller custom built a grout pumping station containing 4 No. electric/hydraulic single ram double oscillating pumps capable of delivering flow-rates between one and 501/min of pressure up to 10Mpa. GROUND ENGINEERING Above: Specially constructed drill rig for horizontal duplex drilling The mixer, pumps and micro-processor were sourced in Europe and the unit was assembled by Keller in the UK under the direction of the project specialist, Chris Nobes who visited the UK to direct his requirements for the unit. page 23 RESOURCES PLANT AND EQUIPMENT CONTINUED In operation the grout was mixed by colloidal mixer, then transferred to an agitating tank contained within the purpose built grouting container. The safety pressure limit for this project was set at 2MPa. Each pump was controlled by computer on which limits could be preset for maximum pressure, grout injection flow-rate and volume injected. These limits were set for each sleeve of each TAM within a database. The database could be accessed at any time and the values adjusted by the grouting engineer if required. The operator of the computer control system was able to view pressure and flow-rate graphs in real-time during any single or multiple injections on the computer screen. Above Left: Pump unit and grout storage tank GROUND ENGINEERING Above Right: Cinaut computer for grouting control and recording Left: 3D schematic view of the grout pumping station page 24 REFEREES It is not possible to provide formal referees as the overall project is still in contract. However the following representatives would be pleased to answer any questions relating to the works. Rob Wallwork (Project Director, LKJV) – 08 9424 5500, 0411 259 451 Richard Mann (Project Director, PTA) – 08 9326 2410, 0419 964 209 In addition the project has been described in a technical paper “Soilfrac Compensation Grouting for Building Protection on the New MetroRail City Project” by Matt Williams and Chris Nobes and will be presented in Perth at a special seminar organised by Engineers Australia, Australian Tunnelling Society and the Australian Geomechanics Society on 12th September 2007. Above: The ABC covered the Soilfrac works on the evening news (see DVD) GROUND ENGINEERING page 25 Soilfrac Compensation Grouting enabled two 6.9m diameter tunnels to be drilled less than 6m below the shops, offices and restaurants of central Perth without the general public being aware of the works”