System Map with Corridors Tab [It seems NS no longer has this map. Fortunately I had a copy in my analysis of intermodal traffic densities.] |
During the 1980's, the Heartland Corridor route was cleared for 19' 6" tall tri-level auto carriers. Most of this work was done by lowering the tracks. In the 1980s, other railroads developed the deep well, articulated flat cars to carry double-stacked containers, which effectively doubled the efficiency of railroad intermodal transport. But the 20' 3" height of a double stack would not fit in the tunnels on the eastern railroads.
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Since many of the tunnels had bridges across the Tug River at their ends and the bottom of the tunnels were already lowered in the 1980s, going down further in the 21st Century was not an option. So they had to go up an average of 1.5' to provide the desired 21' clearance. (About half of the 28 tunnels were constrained by bridges on their end and had to go up. [BLET-2010]) (Hemphill Tunnels illustrates why a realignment done in 1903 caused so many tunnels to have bridges at their ends.) They also had to remove other overhead obstructions including bridges, signal structures, and slide detector fences. The Heartland Corridor will reduce the travel time from Hampton Roads to Chicago from 3 to 2 days.
Because Ohio wanted an intermodal terminal in Columbus as part of the transportation hub they were building around their airport and because Virginia wanted their Atlantic ports to remain relevant after the Panama Canal was expanded, they helped pay for the improvements. And Federal tax money was also involved. Taxpayers paid about half of the $188m clearance improvement project.
Because of a high-priority intermodal train in each direction run for UPS, the contractors had a work window each workday of just 10 hours. This allowed them and NS to reinforce the ceiling, grind away the top, and replace track, ballast and ties in just 15- to 20-feet sections each day. Work began in 2007 on a Saturday-Wednesday schedule because coal traffic was heavier at the end of the week. After the global recession in 2008 cut the demand for coal, the contractors worked Mon-Fri and avoided the expense of weekend overtime pay.
Some tunnels, such as the North Hatfield Tunnel, were dug through solid rock, so it was just a matter of grinding off more rock.
Scott Ogle post via DeBruler |
A Lee Stone Photo via TheTunnelDiaries-Hemphills |
Heartland |
Conference, p19, Figure 4 |
elevation.maplogs, License: Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike (CC BY-SA), via Bridge Hunter [This is Big Sandy #1. It was notched so deeply that it was treated as a crown removal in terms of roof bolts and shotcreating. [BLET-2009] |
Heartland |
TheTunnelDiaries-Cooper |
The fourth option is to remove the tunnel entirely, called daylighting. This option has the advantage that the bulk of the work, removing all of the rock and soil above the lining, can be done while trains are running. Only the removal of the lining itself would need to be restricted to the 10-hour work window per day. I don't know if NS daylighted any of its 28 tunnels. But BNSF removing the Cajon Pass Tunnels is a good example of daylighting.
Multiple contractors from all over the country were used so that multiple tunnels could be enlarged during each 10-hour work window. The project took three years to complete, 2007-2010. The roof of the Cooper Tunnel had eight courses of brick. [BLET-2010]
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