Guest Editorial
Tunneling Toward the Future
The United States is home to more than 300 highway tunnels.
A significant number of these were constructed during the development of the
interstate highway system in the 1950s and 1960s. The age of these tunnels
poses numerous challenges for those responsible for inspecting, maintaining,
and operating them to ensure the safety of the traveling public. For years, the
Federal Highway Administration's (FHWA) tunnel program has provided technical
assistance to the States in the areas of design, construction, maintenance, and
operation. Program staff has worked with the American Association of State
Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO), the Transportation Research
Board, the tunnel industry, and other Federal agencies to develop guidelines
and conduct research to improve the safety and security of highway tunnels.
As early
as 1983, FHWA published a report presenting methods for responding to fires in
highway tunnels. Prevention and Control of Highway Tunnel Fires (FHWA-RD-83-032) underscores
various means of evaluating and reducing the risk of fires, as well as ways to
minimize damages, injuries, and fatalities.
In 2005,
FHWA, AASHTO, and the National Cooperative Highway Research
Program (NCHRP) sponsored a scan of European tunnels. The objectives
were to learn about international efforts regarding underground transportation
systems in the areas of safety, operations, and emergency response. The
resulting report contains recommendations to FHWA and AASHTO on strategies to
enhance the safety, operation, and maintenance of highway tunnels.
Then, in
2009, FHWA published a Technical Manual for Design and Construction of Road Tunnels -- Civil
Elements (FHWA-NHI-10-034).
The manual provides guidelines and recommendations for planning, designing,
constructing, and structurally rehabilitating and repairing the civil elements
-- such as roadway pavement, walkways, and guard rails -- of road tunnels,
including cut-and-cover, mined and bored, immersed, and jacked box tunnels.
In August
and September 2009, in partnership with AASHTO and NCHRP, FHWA completed a
domestic scan and follow-up report on Best Practices for Roadway Tunnel Design,
Construction, Maintenance, Inspection, and Operations (NCHRP Project 20-68A, Scan
09-05). The information gathered during the domestic scan laid the foundation
for a national tunnel inventory. The final report is available at
www.fhwa.dot.gov/bridge/tunnel/library.htm.
All of these endeavors have contributed to FHWA's work to
develop National Tunnel Inspection Standards (NTIS) modeled after the National
Bridge Inspection Standards, an effort that just received an important push
from Congress and President Obama. In July 2012, Congress passed and President
Obama signed into law the Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act (MAP-21). This legislation represents a critical milestone for
tunnels in the United States, as it requires the Secretary of Transportation,
in consultation with the States, to establish national standards for tunnel
inspections. The NTIS will ensure the safety and security of the traveling
public by requiring that all structural, mechanical, electrical, hydraulic, and
ventilation systems, and other major elements of the Nation's tunnels, be
inspected and tested on a regular basis. The NTIS also will make tunnel
inspection standards consistent across the country.
Thanks to these initiatives and more, FHWA's tunnel
program will continue to help States keep existing tunnels in good repair,
while ensuring that new ones like the Alaskan Way Tunnel in Washington State
and the Devil's Slide and fourth bore of the Caldecott Tunnel in California
operate safely and effectively for years to come. For more on the Alaskan Way
Tunnel project, see "From Milepost to Milestone: Innovative Mitigation" on page
20 in this issue of Public Roads.
For more on the Caldecott Tunnel, see "An Eight-Lane, Four-Bore Hole in One" on
page 10.
Jesus M.
Rohena, P.E.
Senior
Bridge Engineer - Tunnels
Federal
Highway Administration
|