Across the Princess Margriet Canal in the province Friesland (The Netherlands) a new aqueduct is
built. The Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct is part of the project De Centrale As, situated in the region of
Dongeradeel, Dantumadiel, Tytsjerksteradiel and Smallingerland. De Centrale As will be the
main access route to the northern part of the Netherlands and will improve the accessibility,
safety, quality of life and the spatial and socio-economic structure of the region.
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thema 1
Hendrik Bulthuis
Aqueduct Burgum
Across the Princess Margriet Canal in the province Friesland (The Netherlands) a new aqueduct is
built. The Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct is part of the project De Centrale As, situated in the region of
Dongeradeel, Dantumadiel, Tytsjerksteradiel and Smallingerland. De Centrale As will be the
main access route to the northern part of the Netherlands and will improve the accessibility,
safety, quality of life and the spatial and socio-economic structure of the region.
thema
Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct Burgum 3 2017
43
2 The Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct crosses the Princess Margriet
Canal at an angle of 76° (fig. 2). The aqueduct provides a
highway with 2×2 lanes crossing underneath the Princess
Margriet Canal (class Va vessels with maximum length 110 m).
The aqueduct was realised by consortium Nije Daam (Mobilis
TBI, Van Gelder and Friso Civiel) and opened for traffic on
October 7 2016.
The structure of the Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct consists of open
and closed parts (fig. 2). The closed part consists of sections 5 to
8 with marsh zones and an water cellar (fig. 3 and 4). The open,
lower parts of the ramps consist of sections 1 to 4 and sections 9
to 13, and are built with steel sheet piles, concrete floors and pile
foundations. The upper part of the open ramps are made using foil
structures for a better integration in the area with green slopes.
Modelling closed section for construction and
operating phase
When the Princess Margriet Canal was opened over the new
aqueduct, section 6 and 7 were finished. Sections 5 and 8 were
built while vessels were already passing. Section 5 is monolithi-
cally connected to section 6 and section 8 is monolithically
connected to section 7. An expansion joint (fig. 5) was installed
between section 6 and 7, largely to prevent imposed deforma-
tions.
A distinction was made between different subsystems accord-
ing to construction type:
a. Pile foundation
b. Underwater concrete floor C20/25
c. Final concrete construction C30/37
During the construction phase particular attention was given
to the exceptional load acting on these sections due to possible collision by passing vessels. An underwater riprap slope at the
front of the 800 mm vertical wall was installed before the
waterway opened to reduce this load.
A structural 3D model was made for section 6 (fig. 6). Because
of equal dimensions, the section 6 calculation in this phase is
the same as the one for section 7. In this building phase, the
foundations of section 6 and 7 were already laid on anchor
piles; these piles, modelled as springs, can transfer both
compressive and tensile loads to the substrate.
Sander van het Erve
Mobilis TBI
1
The Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct under construction
2 Artist's impressions of the finished aqueduct
3 Longitudinal section over closed part of aqueduct
section 5 section 6 section 7section 8
cross section water cellar, see fig. 16
Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct Burgum 3 2017
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4
5
8
7
6
Loads
The loads used to design the structure comply with the standards
and guidelines, and are introduced in the various models as
described earlier. The SLS and ULS load combinations concern
linear loads. A non-linear substrate bedding is not included.
Only some typical loads are mentioned that were special for
this project.
In the operational phase calculations, section 5, 6, 7 and 8 are
modelled in their entirety. The normative distribution of forces
between construction and operational phase determines the
dimensions and amount of reinforcement.
Attention was given to the curved ridge structures under the
marsh zones at sections 5 and 8 (fig. 7, 8 and photo 9). Addi-
tionally, account had to be taken of the water cellar with access
shaft at section 5 (fig. 3, 7 and 10). The dimensions of this were
chosen in order to make sufficient water storage and pumping
capacity available.
The marsh zones situated on top consist of a dry and wet zone
and are necessary to maintain the ecology between the
surroundings on either side of De Centrale As. A path at the
marsh zone was created for a cycling and walking connection.
Also attention was given to the specially shaped intermediate
support between the driving lanes (fig. 10). For aesthetic
reasons, visible ground-retaining walls were equipped with
Corten Steel cladding (photo 11).
4
Cross section over the closed sections 6 and 7
5 Expansion joint
6 3D model section 6
7 3D model sections 5 and 6
8 3D model sections 7 and 8
The 800 mm wall is equipped with three buttresses, which according to
the console principle, partly absorbed collision loads during construction
when a speed limit for passing vessels is applicable. After construction
phase, these collision loads from vessels passing at normal speed are
taken by the entire ridge structure.
curved ridge structure section 8 section 7
seperation sections 7 and 8:
monolithic connection
water cellar
acces s shaft / stairwell
foam concrete
layer 20
10
10 200
850
425 425 -5.620 -5.420
-6.470 expansion joint section 5
section 6
seperation of sections 5 and 6:
monolithic connection
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Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct Burgum 3 2017
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9
11
section 5section 6 section 7
CP 3
CP 4
CP 3CP 4
10
section 5
section 6 section 7
CP 3
CP 4
CP 3CP 4
9
Building the curved ridge structures under
the marsh
10 Cross-section marsh zone situated on top
and middle wall, with columns, as interme -
diate support between the driving lanes
11 Entrance of the aqueduct with Corten Steel
cladding
12 Is a longitudinal section of the entire CP3
and CP4 construction and layout
corten steel cladding
curved ridge structure middle wall as intermediate support
water cellar
Ground pressure resulting in strut force during
construction phase
During the engineering phase, the decision was taken to execute
the compartments CP3 and CP4 simultaneously, being as a
traditional cofferdam for building section 5 to 7 (fig. 12).
The cofferdam is made with sheet piles, underwater concrete,
purlins and struts. Purlins and struts are positioned at the top
of the cofferdam and the underwater concrete floor is at the
bottom.
To build concrete section 8, horizontal forces caused by differ -
ence in horizontal ground pressure in longitudinal direction
had to be taken with struts. The horizontal forces of approxi-
mately 35 000 to 40 000 kN had to be taken up for the horizontal
balance. This large horizontal force is transferred on the concrete
deck of section 6 and section 7 (photo 13).
12
purlins and struts
Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct Burgum 3 2017
Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct Burgum 3 2017 46
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14
15
- vessel type
- waterway type (width and depth)
- loading degree (loaded vessels are indicative)
An underwater slope, installed to counteract colission from a
the vessel, protects the concrete construction.
- Calamity through ice load
- Calamity through vessel's dragged anchor
A vessel's dragged anchor can hook onto a construction.
The anchor force maintained must correspond with the
fracture strength of the chain/cable of the normative anchor,
in this case 1540 kN. Protection against dragging anchors is
provided by mounting a steel plate at the end of the water
container floor. Loads during operational phase
Considered loads during operational phase were:
- Calamity through fire
- Calamity through sinking vessel
- Calamity through falling anchor
For a falling anchor with a mass of 1600 kg a protective layer is
required as absorption zone. This protection also prevents the
deck from being affected by wear from vessels. For the shipping
class within this project, class Va, a solution was chosen in which
a 200 mm foam concrete layer is applied to the deck (fig. 5). A
point load of 500 kN is calculated as load from a falling anchor.
- Calamity through collisions
Cruising speed of a vessel relative to the water (and vice versa)
depends on:
Uz = 3,5 mm
Uz = 7,0 mm
Uz = 5,5 mm
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16
17
At section 8, one wall is both vertically a considerable overhang
as well as horizontally. There is also no access shaft with water
cellar (fig. 7 and 8). In relation to the maximum reinforcement
percentage, floor and wall have acquired greater thickness.
Floor thickness at section 8 increased from 800 to 1050 mm at
the outside and from 1100 to 1350 mm in the middle. Wall
thickness increased from 800 to 1000 mm (fig. 17).
Experience within the project
The very important challenge in the project was to achieve
good balance between design, planning and construction team.
The most challenging part was the curved ridge structure due
to the phasing and the various loads that had to be taken into
account.
?
Deformation in construction and operational phases
Deformations during construction and operational phases are
determined on the basis of SLS combinations (fig. 14 and 15).
Maximum deformation in the middle of the deck is 7 mm.
Maximum deformation of the wall is 5.5 mm. Relative distor -
tion of the deck is therefore 1.5 mm at an un cracked section in
the model. In reality the deck will become partly cracked so
that the deformation of the deck hatch will increase by the
ration of bending stiffness to - 4.68 × 1.5 mm = 7.0 mm. This is
lower than the maximum allowed deformation of 10.85 mm,
prescribed as 1/1000 of the span between the outer wall and
intermediate wall.
It can be seen from the model that when load acts eccentrically
the western outer wall deflects about 5.5 mm, and the eastern
wall 3.5 mm. Only a very small misalignment occurs with an
order of magnitude of 0.1 per mil in transverse direction.
In the longitudinal direction, the misalignment is even smaller.
Force distribution and reinforcement
Distribution of forces in section 5, including water cellar, access
shaft/stairwell and marsh zone, is sketched (fig. 16). The location
of this cross section is given in figure 3. Large downward vertical
loads are acting on the outer walls. These loads are mainly
caused by a ground wedge, dead weight of the walls and slabs
and piled marsh zone, grain and water pressure on the piled
marsh zone and grain and water pressure at the waterway loca-
tion. The pile foundations under the flooring provide reactions
for the vertical balance.
A strut and tie model is drawn in figure 16, the green lines and
pencil lines respectively represent the tensile and the compressive
forces. Total interaction of forces must be externally balanced.
So vertical loads are absorbed by vertical pile reactions. Hori-
zontal ground pressures will also be balanced together. There
must also be internal balance. The finite element package
shows how the normal and shearing stresses run in various
parts of the construction. This serves as a tool for determining
the strut and tie model.
If an orthotropic reinforcement mesh is used, tensile and
compressive forces can be converted to vertical and horizontal
directions. Consequently, llarger quantities of reinforcement
are required than when reinforcement is applied in the direction
of the tensile forces. This is logical because the reinforcement is
no longer placed perpendicular to the crack direction and is
therefore less effective. After consulting the executing body, it
was concluded that orthotropic reinforcement should be used
in certain areas. Therefore heavier reinforcement was installed
in the areas with red vertical shading.
13 Struts providing horizontal equilibrium during building section 8
14 Deformations section 6 during construction
15 Deformations sections 5 and 6 during operational phase
16 Distribution of forces in section 5
17 Sketch of the connection of wall to floor at section 8
Hendrik Bulthuis Aqueduct Burgum 3 2017
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