Thinking Ahead
A precast concrete utility tunnel was
the solution for one of the world's largest drug manufacturers.
By Fernando Pagés Ruiz
Eli
Lilly and Co. grew from a tiny laboratory in Indianapolis
in 1876 to become one of the
world's largest pharmaceutical companies with more
than 31,000 employees in 170 countries. Despite this
international profile, Lilly keeps its headquarters
near the company’s spawning grounds at the “Crossroads
of America,” where the company recently completed
a $55 million expansion to accommodate more than 300,000
square feet of new laboratories and manufacturing
facilities.
The freshly remodeled Lilly Technology Center sits
at the historic hub of Indianapolis where four national
highways once converged. Kentucky Avenue, which runs
through the heart of the center, used to carry most
of the city’s east-west traffic. As a tribute
to this highway, Lilly decided to preserve portions
of the old road as a park-like, pedestrian thoroughfare.
If you take a stroll across the Lilly grounds, you
won’t feel like you’re walking through
a bustling industrial plant. The ambiance resembles
a college campus with its broad, green lawns and curvilinear
paths paved in cobblestone mined from old Kentucky
Avenue.
Lilly had to find a way to bury new utility lines
for its expansion buildings while providing a means
for repairs and upgrades that did not require digging
up the grounds. The company decided to build a tunnel
that could house plumbing and telecommunications lines
while providing ready access for maintenance and future
additions. David Broekers, P.E., the project manager
for Ter Horst, Lamson & Fisk Inc., consulting
site and civil engineers, had the task of selecting
the best materials to construct a 1,000-foot-long
tunnel for utilities, personnel and material transfer
between buildings. Broekers’ selection criteria
included three critical requirements: lowest cost,
speed of construction and durability.
Broekers contemplated cast-in-place concrete construction,
Utilidor (a hot-dipped galvanized corrugated steel
pipe made for utility tunnels) and precast concrete.
He quickly dismissed the galvanized corrugated pipe
option because, despite a coating of bituminous mastic
on the exterior of the pipe, even galvanized metal
will eventually corrode. Cast-in-place concrete offered
design flexibility and durability, but Broekers was
surprised to discover that Hartford Concrete Products
Inc., Hartford City, Ind., could supply high-quality
precast concrete tunnel sections with factory-installed
steel pipe racks at a lower cost – even before
factoring in time saved and quality assurance. This,
plus the reliability of precast concrete as a product
manufactured off-site and Hartford’s willingness
to deliver tunnel sections on schedule for installation,
made Broekers’ decision easy.
The best of
both worlds
One
concern raised over the use of a manufactured product,
whether it be corrugated steel pipe or precast concrete,
was fit. Since the tunnel connected existing and new
facilities in five discrete locations, every component
had to match exact specifications. To ensure a perfect
fit, engineers designed the tunnels with precast concrete
sections and cast-in-place concrete at the connecting
points. Precast concrete worked well in combination
with cast-in-place concrete, whereas a corrugated
steel tunnel would have required a more challenging
connection. Despite the concern for critical connection
points, Hartford came within one-eighth of an inch
in 1,000 feet, says Greg Stutz, vice president of
business development at Hartford.
It turns out that precast concrete also had an advantage
only the Farmer’s Almanac could have predicted:
During spring 2003, while Shiel Sexton, general contractor
in Indianapolis, installed Hartford’s precast
concrete tunnel sections, Mother Nature hit Indianapolis
with two unprecedented floods in as many months. “It
was one of the rainiest years on record; the White
River [near the plant] overflowed its banks twice,”
says Phil Hall, field representative for Hartford.
The tunnel excavation filled with surging water and
the ground under the tunnel washed away. As a self-supporting
structure, the precast concrete sections suffered
only minor damage. “A little backfill and construction
continued,” says Hall.
The
off-site manufacturing of tunnel sections offered
by precast concrete allowed work to proceed in crowded
conditions without extra storage and staging requirements.
Workers could install about 40 feet of tunnel each
day, and Hartford delivered sections as needed.
Space, safety
and convenience
Each precast concrete tunnel section consisted of
two parts: a U-shaped base and a lid. The sections
measured 10 feet in length, 7 feet in width and 9
feet from floor to ceiling. The U shape provided more
floor space and headroom than a round, galvanized
corrugated pipe tunnel could offer. A flat concrete
base coated with non-slip paint allowed plenty of
room for pipe racks, spaced every 10 feet, which served
to suspend cables and utility lines, as well as a
3-foot corridor in which to walk and transport materials.
Safety concerns for toxic fumes and the high volatility
of welding gases forced pipe fitters to weld their
connections outside the tunnel, says Charan Ahluwalia,
coordinating project manager for applied engineering
services, which designed and oversaw the mechanical
and electrical installations. The factory-installed
utility racks, a ladder-like structure of concave
rollers designed to hold various diameter pipes, ranging
from telecommunications conduit to 12-inch diameter
steam ducts, allowed the pipe fitters to weld sections
together outside and feed the pipeline through the
underground tunnel as if fishing electrical wires
through conduit. Since Hartford installed the pipe
racks at its plant, the mechanical contractors did
not have to wait for workers to bolt the racks in
place on site, “which avoided errors and saved
time on the job,” says Ahluwalia.
Because the tunnels might have to resist the weight
of fire trucks in an emergency and, in one location,
a bus line’s turnaround point, engineers required
all the precast concrete sections to meet HS-20 live
load and impact standards as specified by the American
Association of State Highway Transportation Officials
(AASHTO). In other words, “Anything that can
travel on a superhighway can go over this tunnel,”
says David Broekers, structural project manager.
Although
the density and strength of factory-cured precast
concrete assures a virtually watertight structure,
Hartford treated each section of tunnel with a factory-applied
coating of concrete sealant. To fit the sections without
leaks, Hartford designed connections with “bell
and spigot ends” that slide together somewhat
like a carpenter’s tongue-and-groove joint.
Mastic and rope sealant supplied by Concrete Sealants
Inc., New Carlisle, Ohio, with an impermeable wrap
over each joint finished the seal. “And it sure
was nice to have the comfort that, when these pieces
came on site, they were ready to go,” says Broekers.
If any project had good excuses to come in late and
over budget, this one did. But in the end –
despite two floods – the precast concrete tunnel
sections saved Eli Lilly about one-third the price
of cast-in-place concrete and helped complete the
job. Precast will provide the company with a durable
underground corridor to access its utility infrastructure
for repairs and upgrades without having to disturb
the tranquility of its sprawling campus.
Project Profile
Project Name:
Eli Lilly Technology Center Utility Tunnel
Owner:
Eli Lilly and Co.
Mechanical Engineers:
Applied Engineering
Services Inc., Indianapolis
Civil-Site Engineers:
Ter Horst, Lamson & Fisk Inc. Consulting Engineers,
Indianapolis
Contractor:
Shiel Sexton, Indianapolis
Precast Manufacturer:
Hartford Conrete Products Inc., Hartford City, Ind.*
* Hartford
Concrete Products Inc. is a certified plant under
the NPCA plant certification program.