Robsignals
Member
- Joined
- 3 Aug 2012
- Messages
- 424
I often take a bus along the road above Clayton Tunnel through the South Downs on the Brighton Line spotting the ventilation shafts, presume they were all construction headings originally. Apart from the enormous effort in digging it I'm impressed that with the equipment available they got all the levels and direction right, any ideas how? Marking the route is simple enough by line of sight fixing shaft centres on the way, how then was that translated into digging the shafts, getting the different depths right and both tunnel headings in the right direction at each one.
Bringing the spoil up was a major effort in itself, suppose it was simply spread around nearby - the ground looks very mounded in places. The A23 was widened at the south end 20 years ago just fitting round a shaft that had a large retaining wall built for it, road foundations can't be far above the tunnel roof!
Bringing the spoil up was a major effort in itself, suppose it was simply spread around nearby - the ground looks very mounded in places. The A23 was widened at the south end 20 years ago just fitting round a shaft that had a large retaining wall built for it, road foundations can't be far above the tunnel roof!