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Bouygues Construction wins a contract worth more than €1 billion in Hong Kong

Through two of its subsidiaries, Dragages Hong Kong and Bouygues Travaux Publics, France's Bouygues Construction has won a €1.15 billion contract for the construction of a 4.2-kilometre undersea road tunnel in Hong Kong. It is the largest design-build contract ever awarded in Hong Kong.

The project consists in constructing an undersea twin-tube tunnel, each tube with two traffic lanes and 14 metres in diameter. The tunnel will link the New Territories, north of Hong Kong, to Lantau Island, where the international airport is located. It will be bored 50 metres below sea level, which will constitute a record depth for Bouygues Construction. Two tunnel boring machines (TBMs) - rotary drilling machines for excavating and building the structure - will be used.

The two tunnel tubes will be connected every 100 metres by 42 cross passages. Ground-freezing technology will be used to provide a watertight environment to enable these passages to be bored.

The project will entail working in an environment in which pressure is high (over 5 bar). Maintenance operations, particularly with respect to the cutting heads of the TBMs, will be carried out by teams of divers who will live in a hyperbaric base camp for four weeks at a time to allow them to deal with any issue that may arise at any time. This new method of organisation avoids them having to undergo decompression too frequently.

The operation also includes the construction of two cut-and-cover approach tunnels of 530 and 670 metres respectively.

The project will be carried out in compliance with strict environmental standards with regard to marine ecology, water quality, noise impact and waste management. The two ventilation buildings powered by wind energy that will be constructed to the north and south of the tunnel have been designed to qualify for BEAM(1) Plus Gold rating.

Two innovations developed by the Bouygues Construction Research & Development Department will be used on the project in order to reduce the need for manual operations in hyperbaric conditions. Mobydic, a system of sensors incorporated into the disc cutters in the heads of the TBMs, will make it possible to permanently monitor the state of wear of the cutters while allowing real-time geological mapping of rock faces. Snake, a remote-controlled exploration arm equipped with a high-pressure jet, will clean the TBM heads and eliminate clogging to enable them to be inspected.

The works are scheduled to take more than five years (63 months): handover is scheduled for the end of 2018. More than 1,000 employees will be working on the project at peak periods.



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