Scarborough Subway Extension tunnel boring machine getting into position to prepare for tunneling
Metrolinx's Diggy Scardust, the Scarborough Subway Extension's aptly named tunnel boring machine (TBM), is assembled and getting ready to start its tunneling journey at Sheppard Avenue and McCowan Road.
Crews on site have completed building the approximately 28-meter-deep shaft and parts of the TBM are now being lowered into the shaft. This is being done by using a gantry crane that lifts and then carefully lowers very heavy equipment. All assembled, Diggy Scardust weighs 2,050 tones – roughly the weight of 42 GO train cars.
The TBM is being lowered in massive pieces. The machine’s main shield houses the majority of the operational systems of the TBM, such as the main drive system used to rotate the cutterhead and the thrust jacks used to advance the massive TBM. It also features the screw conveyor which is used to remove excavated material from the cutterhead chamber, and the segment erector used to install the tunnel liners.
The main shield was the first piece to be lowered and will be followed by the tail can and then the cutterhead. All these pieces, once assembled, will form the biggest tunnel boring machine used for a transit project in Canada to date.
Lowering each piece is a long process that takes hours and includes a lot of coordination from the crew on site. After all the pieces are lowered, crews will connect them together in the launch shaft and get the TBM ready to start its 7.8-kilometer tunneling journey.
When tunneling begins, Diggy Scardust will travel south, going about 10 meters a day, towards Midland Avenue and Eglinton Avenue, where crews will eventually lift it out of the ground. As it digs through the earth, soil and rocks will be removed by a screw conveyor and transported back to the launch shaft site using a belt conveyor. They will then be hauled off-site for proper disposal.
As crews continue to prepare Diggy for tunneling, they are already turning their attention to other parts of the project route. Headwall construction is underway for the emergency exit and station buildings. This work needs to be completed before the TBM arrives underground at each location.