MYNORTHWEST NEWS

Company that built Bertha blames infamous pipe for early problems

Jul 18, 2016, 12:43 PM | Updated: 1:22 pm

It’s long been argued that an 8-inch-wide metal pipe wasn’t the only cause of the Seattle tunnel machine’s infamous breakdown in 2013. But that’s exactly the thing blamed by the creators of Bertha the boring machine.

Executives at Hitachi Zosen told The Seattle Times that Bertha was working perfectly before running into the metal pipe near South Main Street.

Related: Completed Seattle tunnel will be ‘one of the safer structures in town’

The tunnel project was delayed by more than two years after the machine overheated and stopped boring through soil. The Japanese company responsible for making Bertha told the Times that it spent thousands of hours getting it back up and running.

State crews performing groundwater studies are responsible for leaving the pipe in that spot.

However, it has been reported that the pipe wasn’t the only problem the machine ran into. Loose soil found at the Seattle waterfront were among the other hurdles the crews faced.

Dave Sowers, deputy program administrator for the Highway 99 tunnel project, told KIRO Radio that out of the machine’s launch pit, crews found soil to be loose, hydraulically-placed fill.

“So the ground was much softer, wetter, looser,” Sowers explained.

That all changed, according to state reports, when Bertha and contractor Seattle Tunnel Partners made it to about King Street, where the soil is much harder and sturdy. Since leaving the loose soil behind, there have been no reports of sinkholes — two were found prior to Bertha diving under the Alaskan Way Viaduct.

Furthermore, a review board never determined whether or not the pipe caused the actual Bertha breakdown. It did, however, say the state should have better warned the contractor.

Hitachi Zosen estimates that the $80 million price tag of the machine could turn out to be higher, the Times reports.

For now, it seems as though the perception of the project and people’s faith in the machine has improved. During the Ballard Seafood Fest and West Seattle Fair, for example, questions about the project have been more positive, according to Laura Newborn, spokesperson for the Washington State Department of Transportation.

“They were really questions about expressing curiosity about the project, certainly about the timing of the project,” she said. “There were questions about how people were going to get around after the tunnel was finished. So there seemed to be much more presumption that the project was going to finish and that questions were focused on how it is going to change Seattle down the road.”

Fifty-percent of people who responded to a non-scientific twitter poll said they believe things seem better. And with Bertha boring at 40-feet per day when it is operating, that could very well be true.

MyNorthwest News

catholic teacher...

Ranji Sinha, KIRO 7 News

Shoreline parents gather for same-sex teacher whose contract was not renewed

Parents rallied in Shoreline Monday morning as a community remains divided over a teacher’s contract not being renewed at St Luke’s Catholic School.

1 hour ago

melinda gates foundation...

Frank Sumrall

Melinda Gates leaving the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Melinda Gates announced she is stepping down as co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation via a post on X, formerly known as Twitter, on Monday.

4 hours ago

seattle teen shot boyfriend...

Frank Sumrall

Seattle Police: 13-year-old girl shot by boyfriend in front of family

A 13-year-old girl was shot multiple times allegedly by her boyfriend in front of her family in Seattle's Yesler Terrace neighborhood Saturday night.

7 hours ago

pro-Israel march liberated zone encampment...

Frank Sumrall

Pro-Israel march at UW comes face-to-face with liberated zone encampment on campus

A pro-Israel march is expected to go through the campus' liberated zone encampment made up of pro-Palestinian protestors.

8 hours ago

capitol hill stabbing...

Deborah Horne, KIRO 7 News

Local chef murdered in light rail attack; search continues for suspects

Seattle's restaurant community is grieving. A chef was murdered -- stabbed to death -- in Seattle's Capitol Hill light rail station Saturday.

18 hours ago

tony delivers...

Lisa Brooks

Tony Delivers reaches 750 customers as delivery apps rage war against Seattle

Illes started his own delivery company, "Tony Delivers," promising to bring a customer's food within a limited delivery area for a flat fee of $5.

23 hours ago

Company that built Bertha blames infamous pipe for early problems