To improve the traffic flow in the Antwerp region, it was decided to complete the R1 Ring road by building the Oosterweel Link. The initial solutions were considered either non-sustainable or were out of budget. The final solution, explained further in this project presentation, resulted in a pioneering iso-static 2×2 lane Double Decked Cut & Cover (DD C&C) tunnel. This solution satisfies political, financial and geotechnical boundary conditions, creating a sustainable solution within the targeted budget. The final design stage is nearly completed and the anticipated construction start is by early 2019.
58
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Oosterweel Link
1
Revolutionary iso-static structural design of hinged
double-decked tunnels in Antwerp Belgium
To improve the traffic flow in the Antwerp region in the year
2000 the decision was made to complete the R1 with the reali-
sation of the Oosterweel Link (Masterplan 2020). The Ooster-
weel Link closes the R1, improves the access to the port of
Antwerp (Europe's second largest harbour) and creates a
second main road connection between the banks of the tidal
river Schelde (fig. 2, box 2). Originally, the ?3.2 billion Master -
plan for the Oosterweel Link consisted of a 2x2 lane, 1500 m
long, 25 m high, double decked cable stayed bridge over the
harbour (fig. 2, box 4) and a 2×3 lane 900 m long immersed
tunnel (fig. 2, box 2) underneath the river Schelde. However, by
late 2009 the residents of Antwerp blocked the realisation of
the bridge via a referendum. The environmental impact of the
bridge on the (future) expanding residential areas in the old
Docklands of Antwerp was considered to be non-sustainable.
Immersed tunnel versus Cut & Cover Tunnel
By replacing the bridge with two aligned, 2×2 lane immersed
tunnels on almost the same location an alternative solution
with less environmental impact was suggested in 2010 (fig. 3
and 4). This alternative design addressed most referendum
To improve the traffic flow in the Antwerp region, it was decided to
complete the R1 Ring road by building the Oosterweel Link. The initial
solutions were considered either non-sustainable or were out of budget.
The final solution, explained further in this project presentation, resulted
in a pioneering iso-static 2
×2 lane Double Decked Cut & Cover (DD C&C)
tunnel. This solution satisfies political, financial and geotechnical
boundary conditions, creating a sustainable solution within the
targeted budget. The final design stage is nearly completed and the
anticipated construction start is by early 2019.
In 1969 the Ring road (R1) of Antwerp was opened to the
public in its current state. However, since then, and for more
than 50 years now, the 10 km north-western quadrant of the
R1 is still missing (fig. 2, box 2,3 and 4). With increasing traffic
passing the Antwerp region every day and the disability to
divert traffic in case of an accident, the R1 is extremely vulnerable
to congestion. Nowadays, the Antwerp R1 is ranked fourth of
Europe's most congested highways.
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Oosterweel Link 3 2017
59
-25.00combi wall ø 1200 + 6.29
water level + 4.25
- 6.33
- 10.50
slope 1/4 slope 1/4
3 Immersed tunnel alignment
4 Cross section of the immersed tunnel
5 Double Decked Cut & Cover tunnel alignment
objections but it appeared to be ?500 million costlier and thus
the politicians aimed for substantial cost reductions.
Hence, in 2011 employer BAM NV appointed THV RoTS to
review the immersed tunnel design with the aim to get the
design within the original budget, but still meeting the same
functional requirements. THV RoTS initiated a brain storm
session which eventually resulted in an alternative 2x2 lane
Double Decked Cut & Cover (DD C&C) tunnel design in the
Canal Zone (fig. 2 box 4, fig. 5 and fig. 6). This DD C&C tunnel
is supposed to be built by means of a top-down method tunnel
with 45 m deep Diaphragm walls. This is definitely an out of
the box solution as the deep walls (D-walls) of this DD C&C
tunnel can only be realised after creating a long (but narrow)
man-made island through the Antwerp Harbour by means of a
25 m wide cofferdam of sheet piles filled with sand (fig. 7). For
comparison, an immer-sion trench for two aligned immersed
tunnels is 120-150 m wide and requires the replacement of
more than 1000 m of deep quay walls as well as the replace-
ment of an intersecting bridge. The immersion procedure
would also block the Harbour for 10 weekends, whereas the
DD C&C tunnel saves the existing adjacent objects and keeps
the harbour accessible at any time.
Double deck Cut & Cover tunnel
The approximately 25 m deep DD C&C tunnel proved to be a
cost-effective design as the double deck configuration econo-
mically uses the same D-walls for both road deck levels. This
solution also generates cost reductions by eliminating six
viaducts up to 25 m deep in the sub terrain Oosterweelknoop-
punt (fig. 2, box 3 and fig. 1) as it allows an easier cross-over
junction between the remaining 2×3 lane immersed Schelde -
tunnel and the 2 ×2×2 lane DD C&C tunnel in the Canal Zone.
The specific Antwerp geological conditions are particularly
favourable for a DD C&C tunnel as at a depth between 20-30 m
below the surface an up to 80 m thick impermeable clay layer is
present, the Boom Clay. This Boom Clay layer ensures the
long-term absence of high ground water pressures against the bottom slab of the tunnel by simple drainage, which provides
optimal conditions for an efficient structural design. This
'polder concept' was also adopted for the very wide open C&C
sections of the Oosterweel Link (fig 2, box 3, 5 and 6) thus in
total delivering the unlikely cost reduction of more than ?400
million compared to the original double immersed tunnels. As
most of these costs reductions originate from reduced amounts
of concrete and earth works, the DD C&C tunnel design
reduces many tons of CO
2 and is thus providing a more sustai-
nable solution. It was politically decided to invest a part of these
savings again by replacing the remaining bridge intersecting
the Albert canal with the OKA tunnel (fig. 8) as it provides an
even more sustainable solution. This underground tunnel junc -
tion is to be built with the same DD C&C construction method.
ir. Frank Kaalberg, Okke Los, Jan Ruigrok,
Richard Roggeveld
THVRoTS (JV of Witteveen+Bos and SWECO)
Gert Osselaer, Benoit Janssens
Beheersmaatschappij Antwerpen Mobiel (BAM NV )
1 Oosterweel Link cross over junction from a
birds-eye view
credits: Zwarts & Jansma Architects2 Location of Scheldetunnel (box 2),
Kanaaltunnel (box 4) and OKA tunnel (red
intersection of box 5 & 6)
immersed tunnel
cut and cover tunnelcut and cover tunnel
4
3
5
2
6
1 2 3
45
Oosterweel Link 3 2017
60
T.A.W. +0,000 m
1200
22154
43200
19046
800
Noorderlaanbrug
W.S. +4,250
Grout-pile
12612
Boom clay
Anchor
Technical installations room "Noorderlaanbrug"
+5,500
-5,000 +5,700
2,50%
2,50%
2,50% 2,50%PVR 5100
PVR 5100
PVR 5100
+0,000 m
T.A.W.
+4,200
-19,154 Grout-strut
D-wall
D-wall 1200
1200
-38,000
800
800
1700 1700 11400
11400 3400
3400 3500
3500 3500
3500 1100
1100
D-wall12607
-39,000
-39,000
AS GWC1
AS GWA1
AS GWD1
AS GWB1
30918
Polderpeil -24,665
LEGEND
Reinforced D-wall
Concrete
EPS
+5.000
0.000
-5.000
-10.000
-15.000
-20.000
-25.000
-30.000
-35.000
34 4
3
1
2 5
5
slur ry tr ench, lled with
sand after placing D-walls slur ry tr ench, lled with
sand after placing D-walls water level + 4.250
T.A.W .
BOOM CLAY ca. - 20.000
PHASING:
1. construction pit lled with sand
2. lowering water table in construction
3. install D- wal
4. install alternating D-walls inside
5. Upper par t of D-walls lled with sand
D-
wall D-wall D-
wall
D- wall
6
Cross section
7 Installing D-walls of
Double Decked Cut & Cover
tunnel from cofferdam
7
6
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Oosterweel Link 3 2017
61
stepbarrier
seal D-
wall
steel plates EPS
45°
PTFE
optimisation of the horizontal stability of the
(shorter) D-walls originating from the trial pit
results, the absolute value for the long-term
swelling remained hard to quantify as it can
continue for decades, although its significance
will reduce in time. Based on a literature study,
the trial pit results and long term monitoring
results at other locations, a long term (100 years)
swelling of 190 mm is predicted. To counteract
this issue a 400 mm Expanded Polystyrene
(EPS) layer is implemented below the base slab,
specifically designed to absorb the predicted
ongoing swelling of the subsoil (fig. 10). Soil-Structure interaction: Design by Testing
The Boom Clay not only provides advantageously dry excava-
tion conditions, but also initiates several structural challenges.
When excavating a deep construction pit in the overlaying
Pleistocene sand layers, the Boom Clay has the tendency to
swell. This not only happens at short notice but will continue
over a long period of time. This will generate a substantial long
term swelling pressure against the deep concrete bottom slab.
As the swelling behaviour of the Boom Clay is supposed to be
rather substantial but very hard to quantify, a 20 m deep full
scale 20 × 20 m
2 trial pit (fig. 9) was initiated based on a
'Design by Testing' design philosophy [1]. In order to assess the
driveability of sheet piles through the hard glauconite sands
also a full-scale sheet pile driveability field test was initiated [2].
The results of the full-scale trial pit provided a lot of valuable
information about the short term swelling behaviour and pore
pressure development in the Boom Clay during excavation.
This is very important input for the advanced FE modelling
(PLAXIS) which is widely adopted for the pioneering soil-
structure interaction design of these tunnels. Despite the
8 9
10 11
8 Projection of underground tunnel junction
of Kanaaltunnel and OKA tunnel (in red box)
9 Full scale trial pit
10 Differential heave in FE model results
11 Detail of concrete hinge design at the base
slab
Oosterweel Link 3 2017
62
hinges between the concrete decks and the D-walls, in order to
create an iso-static tunnel structure which allows for differential
heave.
Because of the application of hinges in each joint the horizontal
stability of the double deck tunnel section has to be guaranteed
by horizontal soil- and water pressures as well as the deep fixation
of the D-walls in the Boom clay. The long-term behaviour of
the Boom clay (from undrained towards drained) affects this
fixation. Hence a large number variations of FE calculations
were made; variations in ground conditions on the short and
long term behaviour (based on the trial pit), variation in stiffness
of the D-walls, asymmetric soil loadings, load combinations etc.
Hinge design
Based on the iso-static tunnel section, the boundary conditions
for the concrete hinge design require to account for:
- Rotation due to: differential heave, deflections of the D-walls
during excavation of the tunnel section, deflection of the
decks due to creep and traffic loads resulting in a total, absolute
rotation from 10 mrad up to 40 mrad;
- Strut forces: the normal forces in the decks vary from 1500 kN
up to 7000 kN per running meter (ULS);
- Impact of geometrical imperfections during construction
should be minimized;
- Functionality under extreme conditions as explosions and
inundation should be guaranteed;
- Need for long term maintenance should be minimized;
- Water tightness of the hinges between the roof deck and
D-walls should be assured.
Several known concrete hinge designs were considered but
none of them could meet all the above requirements. Hence a
customized circular cam-pocket design was developed (fig. 11).
This concrete hinge design was extensively researched with 3D
FE models (DIANA) (fig. 12). Although initially a full concrete
hinge contact seemed feasible, in order to simulate microcracking
and verify this design full-scale trial testing was needed.
Finally, it was decided not to pursue this pioneering route but
to introduce two steel plates with an intermediate PTFE layer
in the circular cam-pocket in order to obtain a non-disputable
behaviour of the hinges.
OKA tunnel
This newly developed DD C&C iso-static tunnel design is also
adopted for the even more challenging OKA tunnel in the
Oosterweel Link which is intersecting the Albert Canal (fig. 8
red box). This OKA tunnel will consist of an unprecedented
800 m long 5-lane double-decked tunnel, which is designed to
Iso-static double decked structural tunnel section
As the effects of long term swelling are strongly related to soil-
structure interaction, significant differential heave rates
between the external D-walls and the middle D-walls were
acknowledged with extensive FE modelling (fig. 10). As this
will eventually initiate unacceptable stresses in the usually
adopted heavy monolithic concrete tunnel structures, a possibly
unprecedented structural design is implemented by THV RoTS.
Based on a risk driven design approach it was decided to use
12
13
12 DIANA model of the hinge
(floor modelled as a plate)
13 OKA tunnel in BIM view
(looking in northern direction)
14 Cross section OKA tunnel
(see fig. 13)
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Oosterweel Link 3 2017
63
W.S. +4,250Albertkanaal
+0,000 m
3000
38250
52250
11000
grout-anchor
boom clay
D-wallD-wall
Reinforced D-wall
D-wall
Concrete
Pre-stressed concrete
EPS
LEGEND
-43,000
-51,000 -43,000
-54,000 D-wall
D-wall
Polderpeil -26,150
PVR 5100
-18,434 PVR 5100 As GWF1
As GWE12000 grout-anchor+0,000 m
T.A.W.
1,00°4,00%
1000 900
1200 1200
25150
3500
3500 3500 3500
350031502600
4,00%
1,00°T.A.W.
-1,750
remaining 2×7 lane open cut section (fig. 2, box 6) is supposed
to be covered with a tunnel roof. In anticipation of the outcome
of this process this open cut section is already structurally and
geometrically prepared for tunneling. The anticipated
construction start of the Oosterweel Link is by early 2019.
?
?
REFERENCES
1 Nijs, R.E.P. de, Kaalberg, F.J,. Osselaer, G., Couck, J. van, &
Royen, K. (2015). Geotechnical monitoring of a trial pit
excavation towards the Boom clay in Antwerp (Belgium).
Proceedings of 5th ISGSR Conference, Rotterdam, 13-16
October 2015.
2 Nijs, R.E.P. de, Kaalberg, F.J., Osselaer, G., Couck, J. van, &
Royen, K. (2015). Full scale field test (sheet)pile drivabi-
lity in Antwerp (Belgium). Proceedings of XVI ECSMGE
Conference 2015, Edinburgh, 13-17 September 2015.
3 Heijden, M.G.M. van der, Snel, A.J.M., Geukens, B., Kaal-
berg, F.J., & Osselaer, G. (2016). Safety analyses of a five-
lane double-decked "full-ADR" TERN tunnel in Antwerp
Belgium. Proceedings of 7th ISTSS Conference, Montreal,
16-18 March 2016.
accommodate all transport of dangerous goods (EU-TEN
Tunnel, category A). The safety level of this tunnel and the risks
involving dangerous goods transport has been extensively
analysed, by means of Quantitative Risk Analyses (QRA),
Computational Fluid Dynamics (CFD) and by studying struc-
tural blast loads [3]. As it was decided that the OKA tunnel
should remain in a state of 'not beyond repair' in case of an
extreme (LPG) explosion it was decided to adopt the concrete
hinges here as well, allowing the intermediate decks to fail
without damaging the water tightness of the outer D-walls. In
case of such a calamity the D-walls remain supported by means
of additional implemented grout anchors.
Conclusions
Challenging political, financial and geotechnical boundary
conditions have led to a pioneering DD C&C iso-static hinged
tunnel design to complete the Ring road R1 of Antwerp, creating
a sustainable solution with estimated construction costs within
the targeted budget. The final design stage is nearly completed
and the contractual inception stage is entered. Meanwhile,
public debate is slowly converging to a widely-supported integral
transport covenant in which also the
14
Oosterweel Link 3 2017
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