Breakthrough: Karangahape welcomes Dame Whina Cooper

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Source: Auckland Council

Auckland’s City Rail Link (CRL) is celebrating a mighty milestone with its powerful Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM), Dame Whina Cooper, breaking through today into the Karangahape Station construction site at the end of its 860-metre-long journey from Mt Eden. 

CRL workers 32 metres below ground at Karangahape welcomed Dame Whina Cooper as the TBM breached a 100-millimetre-thick protective wall of concrete into the station cavern.

“Despite all the curveballs, complications and challenges covid keeps throwing our way, we’ve arrived – it’s a positive, exciting and significant arrival,” says City Rail Link Ltd’s Chief Executive, Dr Sean Sweeney.  “Aucklanders can’t see it, but far below their streets a railway that is going to change their lives for the good is rapidly starting to take shape.”

Dr Sweeney says breakthrough success is tempered by covid’s continuing consequences for New Zealand’s largest transport infrastructure project.

“It is very clear, and it shouldn’t surprise anyone, that the pandemic has had serious impacts on our project costs and construction timings,” he says. “Assessments are underway now so that we have a much clearer picture of the extent and depth of covid’s effects on us.” 

New Zealand’s recent five-week-long covid lockdown delayed the TBM’s planned September breakthrough.  CRL’s main contractor, the Link Alliance, continued to operate the TBM during the lockdown, well below full capacity, to stop earth settling around it. Tunnelling accelerated when lockdown restrictions eased. 

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“Great collaboration, planning and old-fashioned hard labour from all our teams below and above ground helped us regain some of that momentum lost to the lockdown – we’re at Karangahape in great shape well ahead of our rescheduled time in November –a real bonus,” says Link Alliance Project Director, Francois Dudouit.  

“The TBM was running sweetly at a rate higher than planned during its drive under Spaghetti Junction on the motorway.”     

COVID-19-related health and safety protocols curtailed larger breakthrough celebrations.  The TBM operators did mark their arrival with a symbolic gift for Karangahape Station workers – a hard hat representing the Link Alliance’s commitment to achieve industry-leading standards in health, safety, and wellbeing.  The hard hat bears Dame Whina Cooper’s portrait. 

The TBM’s name acknowledges Dame Whina Cooper’s mana and reputation as a woman of influence and significance for Māori and for wider New Zealand.

By coincidence, the breakthrough occurred just after the 46th anniversary of Dame Whina Cooper’s own transformational journey – the 79-year-old’s arrival at Parliament in 1975 after walking 1000-kilometres the length of the North Island to protest the loss of Māori land. 

The Link Alliance used a phrase from her landmark speech in 1975 – kia mataara (be alert, observe, witness) – to mark the breakthrough and to recognise her importance to the project. 

Dame Whina’s daughter, Hinerangi Cooper, addressed the TBM directly saying her mother, together with St Barbara, the patron saint of miners, had guided it and its crews safely to Karangahape.   

“Ka puta koe ki te Ao Marama” – you have entered the world of light,” Hinerangi Cooper says.   “The first stage of your journey has ended successfully”

The TBM began mining from the Mt Eden Station construction site five months ago, in May.  The TBM multi-tasked – cutting into the earth, removing spoil to the surface, and installing the concrete panels that line the tunnels.  

At Karangahape the 130-metre-long TBM will now be pushed 223-metres to the northern end of the station cavern and readied for the next stage of its journey, to Aotea Station in Auckland’s midtown.   Its planned arrival is early in the new year where it will connect with the tunnels already built from Britomart and under the lower end of Albert Street.

The second CRL tunnel from Mt Eden to Aotea will be bored in 2022. 

Aucklanders can follow Dame Whina Cooper’s progress online at digcrl.co.nz a website dedicated to the TBM, its progress and the people behind its journey. The website is updated weekly.

Stay up to date with the City Rail Link project at cityraillink.co.nz

MIL OSI

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