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Busway scheme has expert guidance
Providing a 25km uninterrupted link between Cambridge and
St Ives, the Cambridgeshire Guided Busway will be the worlds
longest. Under construction by BAM Nuttall, the precast concrete
used is made to such tight tolerances that commuters' coffees
won't be disturbed even at 60mph.
Most motorists will know the feeling of sitting in traffic
jealously eyeing up the empty bus lane adjacent to them.
But in Cambridge, the local council is making sure temptation
isn't taunt ing drivers by preparing for the opening of a
guided busway, providing uninterrupted public transport across
the county.
The busway will run from the mar ket town of St Ives to Cambridge
and on to Huntingdon, covering a distance of 25km following
the course of a dis used railway line. Once complete it will
be the longest guided scheme in the world, over double the
size of its nearest rival in Adelaide, Australia.
It came into being as a project after research by Chumms
(Cambridge to Huntingdon Multi Modal Study) in 2002 showed
the scheme would cost just a fifth of that of a similar light
or heavy rail project and offer greater passenger capacity.
BAM Nuttall was appointed main contractor on the £116m
scheme in 2005, with CGB Design, a joint ven ture between
Parsons Brinkerhoff - which worked on the Adelaide project
- and Arup, as consultants. Atkins has also been involved
in the project as Cambridge County Council's representative.
After securing £92.5m from the Government and the rest
from devel opers building housing along the route, Construction
began in July 2006 and was due to finish this spring. However,
the scheme has hit a number of delays, including problems
with flooding, and will now not be finished until late summer.
Concrete guideway
When it is complete the route will allow busses to run along
a concrete guideway at speeds of up to 60mph. "Any bus
will be able to use the guideway as long as it has been fitted
with guide wheels which engage with the kerbs and steer the
bus along the track," explains Simon Whalley, project
manager for BAM Nuttall.
But in order for the buses to run smoothly at these high
speeds, the concrete used in the construction of the guideway
has to be of the highest quality. To ensure this quality and
consistency BAM Nuttall set up a pre cast factory half way
along the route at Longstanton. The concrete has been designed
by Hanson, which has a batching plant on site.
"The main challenge was making the precast on site,"
adds Whalley. "Normally the tolerances are +/-15mm but
this is +/-1mm, so it's technically very challenging. We've
only used one mix so that we don't make a mistake. It's over-specified
but is cost effective in practice as it reduces errors."
Some 50,000t of concrete in total will be produced by the
factory to cre ate the 7,000 beams that line the route. These
15m-long 'L'-shaped beams, with a 350mm-thick slab and 180mm
high upstand, are laid together to create the 2.6m-wide guideway
that the buses will run along. Each element is separately
cast and then bolted together in the precasting yard before
being transported to the point of laying.
However, with a site stretching over 26km the ground conditions
vary wildly. "I'd describe them as variably appalling,"
says Whalley. "Some of the beams have had to be laid
on driven piles because the conditions have been so poor.
In these areas we use in situ pile caps, elsewhere it is just
pad foundations."
The piles have been supplied by Aarsleff, which has installed
2,150 to support the busway in a 4km section between St Ives
and Swavensey. The 350mm2 and 250mm2 section piles had to
be driven through made ground, soft clay overlying variable
and unpredictable bands of sand and gravel over stiff clay.
"The ground would vary even between the rows of piles
and we weren't able to probe ahead and deter mine the ground
as we would normally do on a conventional site, as there wasn't
the room or access along the narrow route," says Aarsleff
contracts manager Steve Gilbank. "We agreed on supplying
all of the smaller section piles, about 1,400 of the total,
with a half pin joint. If a pile didn't achieve the set in
the gravel it was then just a simple task of pinning on an
over pile section and driving to completion in to the clay."
Using a combination of two and three of its Banut 700 piling
rigs with 4t drop hammers, Aarsleff completed the first visit
in eight weeks last year and has now returned to the site
to finish the piling.
After piling, BAM Nuttall follows on cutting piles to length
and linking them in each row with a concrete pile cap beam
cast in-situ at ground level. On the sections where ground
is firm er, it performs the same process on the pad foundations.
But even when it gets to this stage it is no simple task installing
the 15m-long, 1St beams. "Logistics is a big challenge,"
adds Whalley. "We have to get the beams laid within the
width of an old railway line."
Using a traditional crane would have meant that work was
required to prepare the ground and surrounding area all along
the route, causing con siderable environmental impact. So
instead a gantry crane was developed that was versatile enough
to deal with the limited space.
Transporting the beams
Beams are transported down the already constructed sections
to the point of laying using former dockyard container handling
lorries. From the lorries they are picked up in pairs by the
gantry straddling the guideway, which - working like a dockside
crane - places them in position before mov ing forward, ready
to lay the next section.
With a mass of computer-controlled hydraulics, the gantry
crane takes a number of men to operate. In fact, it is large
enough for a cabin to sit on top of it to house the controls,
drives and an office, kitchen and toilet. As its progress
can be hampered by bridg es, the cabin is detachable.
"The gantry was one year in the design and planning stage,"
explains Whalley. "It can lay 20 beams a day.
"Because of the nature of the way we're paid on this
kind of scheme the gantry is actually owned by the Cambridge
Guided Busway Project, so it maybe mothballed until an exten
sion is built."
Once the gantry has laid its last beam and the track is fully
tested it is esti-mated that 11,500 journeys a day will be
made on the busway. Whalley is confident they will be as smooth
and comfortable as Cambridgeshire County Council demanded.
"I think we will certainly meet expectations," he
says. "We were tasked with creating a good quality ride
on which you could drink a cup of coffee at 60mph and we're
on the way to delivering that."
Grizzled
Skippers and wild liquorice

When A site stretches across
a full 2761(m of countryside it is probably to be expected
that there will be an incredible amount of wildlife
to consider. Along the disused railway line running
from St Ives to Cambridge, BAM Nuttall had to rehouse
butterflies, badgers and wild liquorice and construct
crossings for frogs and toads.
The strategy of the job has actually
been dictated by the grizzled skipper butterfly,"
explains Whalley. We have had to build a landscape and
ecological mitigation area for it at Over to provide
it with an alternative habitat."
As numbers of the butterfly have
declined, Cambridgeshire County Council was committed
to protecting it. James Martin, environment quality
manager for Cambridgeshire County Council, says: The
area was designed by the country's leading specialists
and provides a mosaic of habitats such as wildflower
grass, gabion walls and original trackbed material suitable
for the grizzled skipper and other invertebrates."
The area also featured significant
amounts of wild liquorice. "We had to work around
the wild liquorice," adds Whalley. "Where
we couldn't we identified where it was, dug it up and
relocated it to the botanical gardens in Cambridge."
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Article courtesy of Contract Journal - 06/05/2009
Further Info
Peter Bishop - Head of Public Relations & Corporate Communication
BAM Nuttall Limited
St James House, Knoll Road, Camberley,
Surrey GU15 3XW
Tel: 01276 63484
Fax:01276 66060
peter.bishop@bamnuttall.co.uk
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