Thursday, 27 January 2011
Monday, 24 January 2011
Update from Project Manager, Paddy Tully
Bitmac has now been laid on section 1 of the site from Bloomfield Road to Hiscox’s Drive bridge, although a 20m section prior to the bridge has been left at B&NES request as they are due to carry out repair works to the structure in February, at which time this section will be surfaced. The new section of bitmac should be open to use by Wednesday or Thursday (27 January) this week. We are approximately 3 days behind programme, mainly due to the amount of rain that fell the week before last which made conditions on site difficult to work with. The trackway across Bloomfield Road open space will be removed in the middle of this week and the contractor will make good any damage under this. Works will then commence on section 2 (Hiscocks Drive Bridge – Monksdale Road), although it is likely that these won’t start in earnest until 31 January.
Paddy Tully
Sustrans Two Tunnels Senior Engineer
Saturday, 22 January 2011
Friday, 14 January 2011
Monday, 10 January 2011
Linear Park Surfacing: start of physical work
Hydrock's digger awaits duty on the Two Tunnels route. |
Here, the digger that will be used to lay the surface for Linear Park waits at the top of the public open space on the Monday morning of the tenth of January.
It's a smaller digger than the two used by the contractors that made such a good job of excavating Devonshire Tunnel - Hope and Clay - but Hydrock, who will be working on this section of Linear Park, have a different task and won't need to move thousands of tonnes of spoil.
Hydrock are pleased to be involved in the construction of the flagship Two Tunnels route, particularly because they've worked on the route in the past - in the nineteen nineties the firm produced an engineering appraisal of Combe Down Tunnel in support of the previous campaign to build a 'Two Tunnels route'. They also have local connections, Hydrock were involved in the extensive stabilisation and infilling work carried out to an extensive range of unstable stone mines beneath Combe Down. (Thankfully, those mines had no impact on Combe Down Tunnel itself, the mines and the tunnel being separated by a great thickness of solid rock)
You'll see the digger has rubber tracks rather than steel ones - this has big advantages for this sort of work, the tracks exert much less pressure on the ground than steel tracks: this is more kind to anything underlying the route, and the machine can be driven on completed work with minimal impact.
Not representative of the whole stretch, but some parts of Linear Park are a bit of an ordeal ... |
Before starting on the route itself, the first task for the contractors is to put down a haul road across the public open space, as was done for the excavation works to Devonshire Tunnel. This will allow materials to be brought to the route with minimal impact on the grassed park, allowing work to start on the route itself.
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