Term | Definition |
---|---|
Traffic congestion |
Overloaded traffic conditions causing delays. Usually referring to vehicular trafic
|
Traffic delay |
Time lost in a journey from normal or potential conditions
|
Travel time |
The time to complete a journey or portion of a journey. The choice of start and end points for journey comparisons may affect analyses
|
Tremie concrete |
Concrete directionally placed under water through a steel or plastic pipe.
|
Trench |
The non-immersed structure abutting the first and last immersed tunnel elements.
|
Tubbing of segment |
Circular metal or pre-cast concrete piles to line tunnels or shafts
|
Tube |
Roadway, track and service cells are each often referred to as tubes. Also used in the jargon expression immersed tube tunnel, meaning immersed tunnel (both circular and box shaped), perhaps originally intended to imply an immersed tunnel with a circular cross-section.
|
Tunnel |
A tunnel, strictly speaking, is a subterranean passage open at both ends. Often used as a synonym for adit, drift or gallery
|
Tunnel / Underpass approach |
Layout approach of the geometrical transition between the surface road and the underpass
|
Tunnel boring machine (TBM) |
A machine that excavates a tunnel by drilling out the heading to full size in one operation and often called a mole. A full-face excavator
|
Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) |
A machine that excavates a circular tunnel by cutting and/or abrading the heading to full size in one operation. Also referred to as a mole. The term has so commonly been associated with rock tunnelling that when a TBM is used in earth it is often prefaced by qualifier "soft-ground".
|
Tunnel liner (steel cylinder) |
Welded circular steel plate sections placed inside the concrete lining to resist internal pressure and for watertightness.
|
Tunneled construction |
Made using tunneling / boring techniques. This implies excavation with only limited access points from the surface
|
Tunnelling cycle |
In rock tunnelling, the 6-part excavation cycle is drilling holes for explosives, loading, blasting (shooting), ventilating, mucking, and erecting supports.
|
Tunnelling machine |
A continuously excavating machine utilizing one or more rotating cutterheads which are revolved under pressure against the tunnel face. Full-face or part-face excavator
|
Tunnelling machine |
A continuous excavating machine utilizing one or more rotating cutterheads which are revolved under force against the tunnel face.
|