The Galgenbuck tunnel in the region of Schaffhausen
Jul 13, 2022
Traffic safety thanks to ductile cast iron extinguishing water pipelines
Schaffhausen with its Munot fortress
The town of Schaffhausen is the most northerly-lying town in Switzerland and, with more than 35,000 residents, forms the centre of the similarly named Canton of Schaffhausen. It is one of the small Swiss towns to the North of the High Rhine at the border between Germany and Switzerland and to the South-East of the Randen in the Table Jura.
The landmark of Schaffhausen is the Munot. This mediaeval fortress with its pronounced circular shape was part of the town’s fortification and was built between 1564 and 1589, partially involving slave labour by the burghers of Schaffhausen.
Another tourist attraction of Schaffhausen is the Rhine Falls, located 2.5 km downstream in the district of Neuhausen am Rheinfall and Laufen-Uhwiesen. With a height of 23 m and a width of 150 m, it is one of the three largest waterfalls in Europe. At an average flowrate of the Rhine, approximately 370 m3 of water tumbles over the rocks every second and in Summer this can be up to around 600 m3 per second.
Congestion relief for the region of Schaffhausen
The A4 Autobahn connects Schaffhausen with the German Autobahn A81 in the North and with the city of Winterthur in the South. After the opening of the A4 bypass in August 1996 there was an enormous change in the traffic flow in the Schaffhausen and Neuhausen region. This subsequently led to a huge increase in the traffic load on the feeder roads to the Schaffhausen South junction, in turn causing congestion in the region around Neuhausen am Rheinfall to increase massively. Meanwhile, more than 25,000 vehicles a day were travelling along this section of road.
In 2007, the Council of the Canton of Schaffhausen presented the implementation project for the new two-lane Galgenbuck tunnel which, as a bypass route, should almost halve the traffic load in the district of Neuhausen am Rheinfall and make the Schaffhausen South junction viable in the long term. As an additional secondary effect, Neuhausen am Rheinfall would benefit from a reduction in the burden of noise and air pollution, from shorter journey times and a minimisation of accidents. The cost of constructing the new tunnel, of approximately 240 million Swiss francs, is covered in full by the Federal Government (the Swiss Confederation) as, legally speaking, this is the restructuring of a national road link.
The new Galgenbuck tunnel project
The new Galgenbuck tunnel passes under the municipality of Rheinfall in a wide arc with a rock cover of only 20 to a maximum of 70 m. The two-lane road in the tunnel runs for a total length of 1,138 m with a maximum gradient of 4.5 % from the “Engi” portal in the West to the “Bahntal” portal in the East close to the Schaffhausen South motorway junction. Once construction has started in 2011, the first stage was to complete the two tunnel portals as cut-and-cover tunnel sections, with the remaining approx. 1,060 m long tunnel section being driven as from the middle of 2013 using mining blasting techniques. Breakthrough was achieved as early as February 2016. After a little more than two years construction time, the concrete work in the tunnel was able to be concluded in July 2018 and the technical engineering and safety specialists could set about their own tasks. The commissioning of the Galgenbuck tunnel is planned for 2019.
Installation of the extinguishing water pipeline in the service duct
With the installation of the operating and safety equipment which is currently underway, the empty concrete pipes are finally being turned into a tunnel. In the service duct located beneath the carriageway, the extinguishing water pipeline with its lateral outlets to the hydrant recesses at road level is the first thing to be installed. Following that will be the installations for monitoring and controlling the tunnel. In addition, the escape gallery is incorporated into the service duct.
The pressurised water pipeline in the service duct consists of ductile iron pipes of the vonRoll ECOPUR type in nominal size DN 250. It runs for a total length of 1,060 m in alignment with the tunnel with a minimum curve radius of 500 m and is fixed to the concrete back wall and the floor of the service duct by pipe clamps. The changes of direction in the curve are accommodated by the deflectability of the push-in joints.
From the main pipeline in the service duct, lateral branch pipelines spaced a maximum distance of 150 m apart supply the seven hydrants in the road space with extinguishing water.
The branch pipelines are also constructed of ECOPUR full-protection DN 125 pipes in ductile cast iron and they run through a casing pipe above a chamber lying approximately 3 m below the hard shoulder to the hydrant connections. Dismantling the branch pipelines from the service duct is therefore possible at all times. For the installation, overhaul and maintenance of the fire hydrants, the hydrant chamber is accessible at any time via an 80 x 80 cm large entrance from the road space.
The full-protection vonRoll ECOPUR pipes are integrally coated with polyurethane (PUR) and are classified in accordance with standard EN 545 [1] as cast iron pipes with reinforced coating for use in all ambient conditions. Because of their highly resistant, pore-free PUR coating to EN 15189 [2] they can be used in all types of soils and therefore have the best protection against corrosion even in the aggressive climate of the tunnel. ECOPUR pipes have a polyurethane (PUR) lining in accordance with EN 15655 [3]. The mirror-smooth PUR lining minimises deposits and, because of extremely low friction losses (roughness k = 0.0014 mm according to SVGW W4 [4]), promotes the hydraulic performance of the extinguishing water pipeline in case of fire. In order to safely absorb the forces occurring due to internal pressure, the entire pressurised water pipeline including the hydrant branch pipelines is secured against longitudinal forces by the assemblyfriendly vonRoll HYDRO-TIGHT thrust protection system. The flexible cast iron pipe system is completed by vonRoll ECOFIT fullprotection fittings with push-in and flanged joints which are also integrally protected the with a thick epoxy coating to EN 14901 [5] and the enhanced requirements according to RAL-GZ 662 [6].
High-performance hydrants for extinguishing water supply
In order to fulfil the high requirements for fire protection, the hydrant recesses are equipped with the high-performance double-armed vonRoll HYPLUS type hydrants which can deliver a maximum output of 4,000 l per minute (at a differential pressure of 1 bar). The patented joints between the top and bottom parts of the hydrants allow stepless 360° directing of the hydrants in the narrow installation recesses in the road space of the new tunnel.
The flexible VARIO 2.0 type H2L hydrant bottom with a maximum adjustment range of 70 cm (in 5 cm increments) offers optimal flexibility in the hydrant chambers when bridging over the existing level differences. The DUO maintenance shut-off installed as standard allows later overhaul work on the hydrant under full system pressure without decommissioning the extinguishing water supply.
Full-protection valves for secure operation and simple maintenance
At the high point of the tunnel – at the extinguishing water pipeline connection in the Engi portal – vonRoll VS 5000 type shut-off valves are used as pipeline valves and for cleaning purposes. At the same time a vonRoll vent valve is arranged at this point to extract air from the extinguishing water pipeline. The extinguishing water pipeline in the service duct equipped with a VS 5000 pipeline valve at each hydrant branch pipeline and it is divided into individual sections so that, in case of maintenance work, the entire pipeline does not have to be taken out of operation. There are also cleaning and drainage connected connections installed at the same point for servicing and cleaning work.
Conclusion
The safety and security infrastructure in motorway tunnels takes first place with the tunnel operators, not least because of the devastating and catastrophic fires which have occurred in certain tunnel structures in the past.
Ductile iron pipe systems have proved their worth for extinguishing water pipelines in road tunnels for decades now and in case of fire events they are extremely reliable for delivering firefighting water. The flexibility of the sockets of ductile iron pipe systems make very flexible and efficient installation of the extinguishing water pipelines possible in the tight conditions inside the tunnel. Because of its mirror-smooth surface, the innovative lining with polyurethane avoids friction losses in the system, which in turn results in an increase in hydraulic performance when the water is drawn off. Ductile iron pipes ensure a high degree of operational security of the extinguishing water supply in challenging tunnel structures.
Bibliography
Author
Roger Saner
More News and Articles
Aug 28, 2024
News
ITpipes Secures $20M to Transform Water Infrastructure Management
ITpipes announced it has secured $20 million in equity financing from Trilogy Search Partners and Miramar Equity Partners.
Known for its trusted and user-friendly platform, ITpipes …
Aug 26, 2024
News
Professor Dr.-Ing. Dietrich Stein
With deep sadness we announce the loss of our founder and partner Prof Dr Dietrich Stein at the age of 85.
Engineers around the globe are thankful for his dedication to the inventions in the fields of sewers, …
Aug 26, 2024
News
PPI Releases New Installation Guide for PE4710 Pipe
PPI’s MAB-11-2024 Covers HDPE Water Pipelines Up to 60-in. Diameter and 10,000-ft Long Pulls
Developed by the Municipal Advisory Board (MAB) – and published with the help of the members of the …
Aug 23, 2024
News
Faster wide-scale leak detection now within reach
Mass deployment of connected leak loggers is being made possible by the latest technology, writes Tony Gwynne, global leakage solutions director, Ovarro
Water companies in England and Wales are …
Aug 21, 2024
News
Kraken awakens customer service potential in water
The innovative customer service platform Kraken has made a successful transfer from energy to water. Ahead of their presentation at UKWIR’s annual conference, Portsmouth Water chief executive …
Aug 19, 2024
News
Predicting the toxicity of chemicals with AI
Researchers at Eawag and the Swiss Data Science Center have trained AI algorithms with a comprehensive ecotoxicological dataset. Now their machine learning models can predict how toxic chemicals are …
Aug 16, 2024
News
Goodbye water loss: Trenchless pipe renewal in Brazil
Pipe renewal in Brazil
How do you stop water loss through leaks in old pipe systems without major environmental impacts and restrictions? The answer: with trenchless technology, or more precisely …
Aug 14, 2024
Article
Impact of high-temperature heat storage on groundwater
In a recently launched project, the aquatic research institute Eawag is investigating how the use of borehole thermal energy storage (BTES) affects the surrounding soil, the groundwater …
Aug 12, 2024
News
Watercare completes East Coast Bays sewer link
Watercare has successfully finished the final connection on the East Coast Bays link sewer at Windsor Park in New Zealand.
Much of the East Coast Bays sewer link was installed using horizontal directional …
Aug 09, 2024
Article
Innovative water solutions for sustainable cities
Cities need to become more sustainable and use their water resources more efficiently. Managing water in local small-scale cycles is one possible solution. A new white paper by Eawag, the University …
Aug 07, 2024
Article
How digital technologies contribute to universal drinking water
Digital water technologies have an important role in ensuring universal access to safe drinking water by 2030, that is according to a new report from the World Health Organisation. …
Aug 05, 2024
News
Knowledge transfer on sustainable water infrastructure in India
India’s fast-growing cities need an efficient infrastructure for water supply and wastewater disposal. A research cooperation, is therefore supporting the development of a sustainable …
Contact
European Association for Ductile Iron Pipe Systems · EADIPS® / Fachgemeinschaft Guss-Rohrsysteme (FGR®) e. V.
Dipl.-Ing. Christoph Bennerscheidt
Managing Director
Doncaster-Platz 5
45699 Herten
Germany
Phone:
+49 2366 9943905
Fax:
+49 2366 9943906