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Science & Medicine

Crossrail - Tunnelling under London

Frontiers by BBC

Jul 10, 201328:13Science & Medicine

Tracey Logan goes underground to find out how Crossrail is using the latest engineering techniques to create 26 miles of tunnels below London's tube network, sewers and foundations and through its erratic, sometimes unpr...

About This Episode

Crossrail - Tunnelling under London is an episode from Frontiers by BBC. Tracey Logan goes underground to find out how Crossrail is using the latest engineering techniques to create 26 miles of tunnels below London's tube network, sewers an...

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This episode belongs to Frontiers.

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Episode Details

Published Jul 10, 2013, 28:13 long, audio available.

Questions About This Episode

What is Crossrail - Tunnelling under London about?

Tracey Logan goes underground to find out how Crossrail is using the latest engineering techniques to create 26 miles of tunnels below London's tube network, sewers and foundations and through its erratic, sometimes unpredictable geology. She finds out about the latest science being used in Europe's biggest engineering project. London sits on a varied geology of deposits of fine-grained sand, flint gravel beds, mottled clay, shelly beds which are sometimes mixed with pockets of water. This sheer variety has presented a challenge to London's tunnel engineers since the early 1800s. Tracey goes on board one of the huge, 150 metre long, 1000 tonne tunnel boring machines as it makes its way beneath London's Oxford Street. At depths of up to 40 metres it can negotiate London's complex geology with incredible precision and can instantly adjust the pressure it applies at the cutting head to ensure there is no ground movement above. Its precision engineering means it also follows a route which avoids the many existing foundations, sewers, and the tube network, sometimes travelling just centimetres past the London underground tunnels. Tracey also finds out how unexploded ordnance from World War II still has to be carefully accounted for while digging beneath the capital. The tunnel boring machines operate nearly 24 hours a day, 365 days a year and so even has an onboard kitchen and bathroom facilities for the 20 or so operators who make up its 'tunnel gang'.

Where can I listen to Crossrail - Tunnelling under London?

You can listen to Crossrail - Tunnelling under London online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.

Which podcast is Crossrail - Tunnelling under London from?

Crossrail - Tunnelling under London is an episode from Frontiers by BBC.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 28:13 long.

When was this episode published?

This episode was published on Jul 10, 2013.

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Are there related episodes from Frontiers?

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