The difficult problem of crossing Boston's Fort Point Channel with a highway
tunnel was solved in a very big way - in a place called "the casting basin."
(Map of the Project Area.)
As part of the Central Artery/Tunnel Project, the Massachusetts Turnpike (I-90)
extends from its current eastern end, through a tunnel beneath South Boston to the Ted Williams Tunnel, Logan Airport, and East Boston. Fort Point Channel,
a narrow extension of Boston Harbor into South Boston, lies just east of the I-90/I-93
(South Bay) interchange. To cross the channel, Central Artery engineers decided
to use tunnel sections lowered into a trench, much like the technique used to
build the Ted Williams Tunnel under the harbor.
But the Ted Williams Tunnel was built using steel tunnel sections each longer
than a football field that were barged to Boston from a shipyard in Baltimore.
That method didn't work at the Fort Point Channel because there wasn't enough
room to float the sections under channel bridges at Summer Street, Congress Street,
and Northern Avenue. The project couldn't build a steel mill in South Boston,
so the designers decided to go with concrete tunnel sections, the first use of
this technique in the United States.
How to do it? The concrete sections had to be fabricated in a way that allowed
them to be conveniently moved into position in the channel. The solution was the
casting basin, in effect a huge dry dock 1,000 feet long, 300 feet wide, and 60
feet deep - big enough to hold an aircraft carrier or three Titanics side by side.
The basin was dug on the South Boston side of the channel, next to the Gillette
Company's manufacturing headquarters. (More than 450,000 cubic yards of dirt was
excavated to form the basin.) The channel end of the basin was sealed off from
the water by a series of round cofferdams, each filled with crushed stone. The
six tunnel sections were built on the gravel-covered bottom of the basin, four
in the first phase of construction. The completed sections were sealed watertight
at either end. Then the basin was flooded. The crushed stone was removed from
the cofferdams holding back the channel on the western end of the basin. Also,
the steel sheet piles forming the circular structures were removed so the sections
could be floated out of the basin and positioned to be lowered into a trench dredged
on the bottom of the channel.
The longest of the six tunnel sections was 414 feet long, the widest 174 feet
wide. All were about 27 feet high. The heaviest weighed more than 50,000 tons
(more than the Titanic, or about the weight of a battleship). Including ramps,
the channel crossing carries 9 lanes of traffic, four eastbound (EB) and five
westbound (WB).
Lowering the sections into the channel was a precise business, because the sections
couldn't be moved once they were placed, and each had to line up perfectly with
adjacent sections. Thus the trench on the bottom of the channel was dredged and
graded within extraordinarily narrow tolerances. But there was another challenge
under the channel that made sinking the concrete sections even more delicate and
precise: The Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority's Red Line subway tunnel
runs under the channel, and the I-90 extension passes just a few feet above it.
The weight of the concrete sections would damage the tunnel if nothing were done
to protect it.
The solution to that problem was 110 concrete shafts, each six feet in diameter,
drilled in the bottom of the channel on either side of the subway tunnel as much
as 145 feet into bedrock. The tunnel sections rest on these shafts, with these
legs matching up with fittings protruding from the bottom of the sections, like
giant Lego blocks.
One further challenge for the designers was adapting the western-most tunnel
sections to be the foundation for a ventilation building (VB1), which rises above
the shore of the channel atop the highway tunnel near the U.S. Postal Service
building.
Tunnel Tube Float-outs
Float-out of the first four tunnel sections took place in early 2000. The first
float-out sequence included placing two sections and mooring two more along the
shore of the channel next to the U.S. Postal Service building for placement later
in the year. When the first four sections were out of the basin, the cofferdams
were re-installed, the basin pumped dry, and two more sections were built inside.
After the final two sections were placed (their eastern ends overlap with the
channel end of the casting basin) in June 2001, the basin was permanently sealed
off next to the channel and the 1,000-foot excavation became a cut-and-cover tunnel
path of the highway toward A Street, the South Boston Interchange, and the Ted Williams Tunnel.