USA TODAY US Edition

Can Musk make tunneling easier?

Inventor hopes to revolution­ize industry

- Nathan Bomey

If it were anyone else, the notion of digging hundreds of miles of tunnels to create a new subterrane­an transporta­tion network under congested cities would seem like pure science fiction.

But the dreamer behind this vision is Elon Musk, the billionair­e innovator who has already shown with his Tesla electric cars and SpaceX rockets that he thinks big and doesn’t wait for others to transform fantasy into reality.

Once again, Musk is aiming to shake up an arcane industry not used to outside-the-box thinking and yet potentiall­y ripe for disruption: the undergroun­d world of tunneling.

He could use tunneling to achieve his moonshot goal of clearing up Los Angeles traffic. It also could be employed to build a “hyperloop” system — a passenger capsule that magnetical­ly levitates inside a tube to achieve high speeds — that would run 226 miles from New York to Washington, D.C. Travel time: 29 minutes.

Musk hopes to dramatical­ly speed up digging by inventing new tunnel-boring-machine technology that could slash billions from a major project.

Tunneling is big business. In the U.S. and Canada alone, there are about 60 major tunnel projects in the planning or design phase totaling more than 1.8 million feet, according to the Undergroun­d Constructi­on Associatio­n of the Society for Mining, Metallurgy and Exploratio­n.

Although mass-transit proponents, tunnel machine companies and industry experts say the hurdles are enormous, Musk is bringing together the people and machinery to make his vision a reality.

The problem: Using existing technology, digging a tunnel from New York to D.C. could take nearly 100 years.

It seems like a challenge tailormade for Musk who, having moved heavens with his space business, now seeks to move earth.

“Building a tunnel boring machine is as complicate­d as building a rocket,” said Gary Brierley, a tunneling consultant and former president of the American Undergroun­d Constructi­on Associatio­n whose profession­al nickname is Doctor Mole. “I hate to say this, but I think rockets are kind of easy compared to tunnels.”

Brierley’s logic? Rockets fly through the air and space, which is fairly predictabl­e in compositio­n. But digging tunnels requires navigating unforeseen rocks, soil, water, contaminat­ion and manmade objects. Musk will also need to figure out how to make sure nearby structural foundation­s are not disturbed.

To get started, Musk has assembled a stealth team of advisers to form The Boring Company and acquired a 14-foot-diameter tunnel machine from Menomonee Falls, Wis.-based Super Excavators, USA TODAY has learned. He plans to start test digging next to SpaceX’s factory in the Los Angeles suburb of Hawthorne, Calif.

For now, The Boring Co. is staying quiet about its plans. It declined to comment for this story. But its challenge is clear.

Today’s best machines can dig at a rate of about 1/10th of a mile per week, up from a few feet per day several decades ago, said

Mike Mooney, director of the Center for Undergroun­d Tunneling and SmartGeo at the Colorado School of Mines.

For example, Washington, D.C.’s water system bought tunnel-boring machines — nicknamed Lady Bird, Nannie and Lucy — that ranged in speed from

18 feet per day to 57 feet per day for a recent phase of a project aimed at curbing sewer runoff into local waterways. At nearly

4.6 miles, the longest tunnel took about two years.

But Musk is aiming for a more than 10-fold improvemen­t. Current machines, which often cost tens of millions, top out at a few hundred feet per day, but Mooney speculated that a mile per week is possible. At that rate, the hyperloop tunnel would take just more than four years to dig.

Speeding up to that pace would dramatical­ly reduce the billions in cost in tunneling, making Musk’s hoped-for hyperloop project more realistic.

Industry leaders said there’s room for innovation, particular­ly if Musk can develop a machine that tunnels through the earth while building retaining walls at the same time, a feat that most tunnel-boring machines cannot accomplish today.

“That would be a pretty cool innovation,” said Carlton Ray, director of the D.C. Water system’s Clean Rivers Project.

Critics say Musk should focus on improving the transporta­tion systems that are already in place — and in need of improvemen­t — just as he has tackled creating a mass-market electric car with self-driving capability for Tesla.

Musk’s plan is a “distractio­n” from the substantiv­e issues at hand involving roads and railways, said Robert Puentes CEO of the Eno Center for Transporta­tion.

Musk faces a raft of obstacles: uCosts. Undergroun­d infrastruc­ture is typically many times more expensive than abovegroun­d infrastruc­ture, which is why most parking garages are above ground and most passageway­s across rivers are bridges, not tunnels. In addition to the cost of digging, tunnel contractor­s must build escape routes, prevent local structures from moving during digging and avoid triggering environmen­tal problems.

uBureaucra­cy. Tunnel companies say securing the necessary approvals from transporta­tion agencies, environmen­tal regulators and property owners can take longer than actually digging the tunnel.

“These tunnels are phenomenal­ly expensive. The planning effort is phenomenal­ly complex. Getting the permission is phenomenal­ly complex,” Brierley said.

Musk flummoxed the industry

“If his dreams are realized, we believe it could bring about dramatic social and economic changes.”

Takashi Hayato, president of the U.S. subsidiary of Japan-based manufactur­er Hitachi Zosen, which made Seattle’s Bertha, speaking about Elon Musk

by tweeting in July that he had received “verbal” government approval for the hyperloop, without providing any details on what he meant. A White House spokesman said the Trump administra­tion had had encouragin­g talks with Musk and The Boring Co. about the project.

uLogistics. After a tunnelbori­ng machine’s steel cutterhead tears through the earth, workers must remove displaced soil, which requires extensive coordinati­on and a system of conveyors or muck cars, which look like garbage dumps on a rail.

For a project the size of the New York City-to-D.C. hyperloop, simply extracting the dirt alone would be vexing.

“You’ll need to figure out how to get rid of the muck,” said D.C. Water’s Ray.

But The Boring Co. believes the dirt excavation process can be transforme­d.

The company says on its website that it is “investigat­ing technologi­es that will recycle the earth into useful bricks to be used to build structures.”

uGeology. The earth, quite simply, is not predictabl­e. Soil compositio­n changes, and crews often encounter unexpected things undergroun­d.

For example, an 8,000-ton machine nicknamed Bertha snagged on an unexpected piece of steel in December 2013 while boring a nearly 2-mile highway tunnel underneath downtown Seattle. The pipe casing, measuring 8 inches in diameter and 110 feet long, had apparently been installed in 2002 after an earthquake to gauge groundwate­r flow.

Work stopped for about two years while the steel was removed and the machine was rehabilita­ted.

Musk’s vision came about after he was overwhelme­d with frustratio­n at traffic and tweeted a vision of digging a network of tunnels underneath Los Angeles last December. It would whisk cars from place to place at highspeeds while riding atop platforms.

“If his dreams are realized, we believe it could bring about dramatic social and economic changes,” said Takashi Hayato, president of the U.S. subsidiary of Japan-based manufactur­er Hitachi Zosen, which made Seattle’s Bertha.

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 ?? AP ?? Tesla released this artist’s rendering of a hyperloop transport capsule. Elon Musk is CEO of Tesla and SpaceX.
AP Tesla released this artist’s rendering of a hyperloop transport capsule. Elon Musk is CEO of Tesla and SpaceX.

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