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Conference Proceedings

15th Australasian Tunnelling Conference 2014

Conference Proceedings

15th Australasian Tunnelling Conference 2014

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High-pressure Fissure Grouting for Drill and Blast Tunnelling, Ambuklao, Philippines

The Ambuklao hydroelectric dam was originally constructed in the 1950s in the remote and mountainous region of the northern Philippines. Following its construction the dam has suffered heavily due to siltation and a partial collapse of the intake structure due to a 7.8 magnitude earthquake that struck the region in 1990. Between the years 1990 and 1999 the power station progressively lost its capacity to generate power. In 1999 the owner took the power station out of commission. The power station remained idle over the next 12 years. In 2008 the power station was sold to a new owner who commissioned the rehabilitation works.The rehabilitation project restored the operating status of the power station in June 2011 and increased its capacity from 75 MW to 105 MW. The civil contract of the rehabilitation project required the construction of a new intake structure behind an in situ rock coffer dam on the edge of the existing reservoir, new 6.2m diameter_x000D_
124m deep blind sunk shaft behind the intake structure, which connects to a new 6.8m horseshoe profile headrace tunnel that ultimately connected onto the existing vertical penstocks which feed three No 35 MW Horizontal Turbines rated at 155m head.The unique challenge in rehabilitating this existing hydropower station involved finding solutions that would conclusively deal with the challenging geological and hydrogeological conditions associated with excavating new tunnels and a drop shaft beneath a live dam.McConnell Dowell was awarded the civil works package for the rehabilitation works in August 2008. The Ambuklao rehabilitation program took 33 months to complete.Over 600m of tunnels were excavated in highly weathered and often challenging geotechnical conditions via drill and blast with the extensive use of high-pressure fissure grouting to control groundwater ingress that was surcharged by the dam.This paper focuses on the use of high-pressure fissure grouting that took place to enable the excavation of the new waterway system and intake structure.CITATION:Bowskill, A and Harrison, C, 2014. High-pressure fissure grouting for drill and blast tunnelling, Ambuklao, Philippines, in Proceedings 15th Australasian Tunnelling Conference 2014 , pp 141-152 (The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy: Melbourne).
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  • High-pressure Fissure Grouting for Drill and Blast Tunnelling, Ambuklao, Philippines
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  • Published: 2014
  • PDF Size: 2.926 Mb.
  • Unique ID: P201411016

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