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Major tunnelling underway on Sydney Metro West   

01.06.2023

Mega tunnel boring machines in the ground and carving out the next stage of Sydney Metro West.
Mega tunnel boring machines in the ground and carving out the next stage of Sydney Metro West.
Mega tunnel boring machines in the ground and carving out the next stage of Sydney Metro West.

Historic moment as the first two huge tunnel boring machines (TBMs) start carving out a section of the 24-kilometre Sydney Metro West line.

The next stage of the city-shaping Sydney Metro project is well and truly underway with TBM Daphne already 150 metres into its 11-kilometre journey from The Bays to Sydney Olympic Park, and TBM Beatrice 45 metres into its journey on the parallel tunnel.

As is tunnelling tradition across the world, the Sydney Metro West TBMs are named after women to bring luck to the workers who look to Saint Barbara for protection.  

TBM Daphne has been named in honour of pioneer for Paralympic sport Daphne Hilton. Daphne Hilton was one of the most successful Australian athletes of all time and a trailblazer for women in sport. Daphne competed in three Paralympic Games between 1960 and 1968 and set a record that is unlikely to ever be broken— winning 14 medals across five different sports including athletics, swimming, archery, table tennis and fencing. 

TBM Beatrice’s namesake is iconic local newspaper seller Beatrice Bush who sold newspapers for over 25 years from the traffic island at the intersection of Victoria Road and The Crescent in White Bay. It is estimated she sold five million papers between 1971 to 1996, passing away six days after she sold her last paper. Her life inspired songwriters, filmmakers, sculptors and painters.   

Along with TBM excavation, construction of the tunnels includes activities like the construction of cross passages and crossover caverns.  

Construction of the twin metro tunnels from The Bays to Sydney Olympic Park is part of the Central Tunnelling Package awarded in July 2021 to the Acciona Ferrovial Joint Venture. 

Sydney Metro West will double the rail capacity between Sydney’s two biggest CBDs once passenger services commence in 2030.  

For more information about Sydney Metro West, visit West project overview.  

 

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