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Auckland's City Rail Link tunnel boring machine breaks through to Karangahape Station

Sunday, 17 October 2021

The Dame Whina Cooper tunnel boring machine breaks through and connects Mt Eden to Karanagahape Rd
The Dame Whina Cooper tunnel boring machine breaks through and connects Mt Eden to Karanagahape Rd

The Auckland City Rail Link's tunnel boring machine has broken through today into the Karangahape Station construction site, after digging through 860 metres of ground from Mt Eden.

The machine, named Dame Whina Cooper, breached a 100-millimetre-thick protective wall of concrete into the station cavern Sunday, 32 metres below ground, as part of the $4.4 billion rail project.

City Rail Link chief executive Dr Sean Sweeney said New Zealand's Covid-19 lockdown delayed the planned September breakthrough, but tunnelling accelerated when lockdown restrictions eased.

'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.

**READ MORE:

* City Rail Link: Tunnel machine completes first 500 metres of Auckland's underground

* Urgent hardship payments of $2500 to $10,000 from City Rail Link hardship fund

* Covid-19: Supercity infrastructure projects grapple with lockdown restrictions

* City Rail Link: 'Dame Whina Cooper' tunnel-boring machine poised for action

* City Rail Link: New Zealand's largest infrastructure build 'taking shape'

**

'Despite all the curve balls, complications and challenges Covid keeps throwing our way, we've arrived - it's a positive, exciting and significant arrival.'

The machine began mining from the Mt Eden Station construction site in May.

The 130-metre-long machine will now be pushed 223 metres to the northern end of the cavern, before the next stage, digging to Aotea Station in central Auckland. Its is planned to arrive 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.

The City Rail Link is expected to carry up to 54,000 people an hour and would move the equivalent capacity of three Auckland Harbour Bridges or 16 extra traffic lanes into and through the city at peak times.