Hunter Expressway

Australia

Hunter Expressway

Project description

The Hunter Expressway was originally proposed in 1988 but the construction started in 2010 after 22 years.

It provides a much needed east west link in the Hunter Valley, connecting Newcastle and the lower Hunter, hence reducing travel time by almost half an hour.

The Eastern Section from F3 to Kurri Kurri comprises three viaducts through the Sugarloaf Range. The viaducts have a total length of 787 m and are up to 47 m in height above the ground.

mageba scope

mageba supplied not only the spherical bearings, shear keys and modular expansion joints for the viaducts, but also a structural health monitoring system.

The installed RESTON® SPHERICAL bearings are all equipped with the mageba highgrade sliding material called ROBO-SLIDE and have a load carrying capacity of 30,000 kN.

The RESTON® FORCE shear keys transmit a total horizontal force of 8,500 kN.

The supplied TENSA® MODULAR expansion joints have a total length of 142 m and allow for a total displacement of 680 mm.

In 2013 a hydrostatic tube balance monitoring system has been in installed on all viaducts.

Hunter Expressway_Installation

The mageba TENSA MODULAR expansion joint during installation on the first viaduct

Hunter Expressway_steep gullies

The Hunter Expressway viaducts over Sugarloaf Range with its steep gullies

Key Data

Products:

60 RESTON SPHERICAL bearings, 12 RESTON FORCE shear keys, 12 TENSA MODULAR expansion joints, ROBO-CONTROL structural health monitoring system

Installed:

2011–2013

City:

Hunter, NSW

Type:

Viaduct

Length:

40 km

Builder:

Thiess