Watercare’s Central Interceptor project has achieved another milestone with the Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) passing its
official Factory Acceptance Test (FAT) in Germany.
The Central Interceptor is being delivered for Watercare by Ghella Abergeldie JV. The TBM, which has been named
‘Hiwa-i-te-Rangi’ after a Mataariki star, has been assembled at the Herrenknecht factory over 10 months, using parts
from all over the world. The TBM is 190metres long and is 5.47metres in diameter. Extensive testing has finished, and it
will now be disassembled before being loaded into containers and put on a ship to travel to Auckland.
Central Interceptor executive programme director, Shayne Cunis says it’s great news for the whole project team: “For
months we’ve been watching remote video footage as the TBM was pieced together.
We’re really pleased to hear Hiwa-i-te-Rangi is now ready and will be here mid-November. It will begin work on the
14.7kilometre Central Interceptor tunnel early next year.”
Meanwhile, excavation of the main shaft at the Māngere site is progressing well and has reached a depth of more than
24metres. Excavated soil is being deposited at a former quarry at nearby Puketutu Island (known as Te Motu a Hiaroa to
Mana Whenua), which will eventually be returned to the people of Auckland as a park.
Elsewhere, two shafts are under construction at May Rd, Mount Roskill. Work at three other sites has also begun at Keith
Hay Park and Haycock Ave, Mt Roskill as well as Dundale Ave, Blockhouse Bay.
Construction teams are undertaking simulated training at the Central Interceptor’s dedicated training centre in
readiness for work underground. This includes practicing changing the giant cutter head tools using a special replica
TBM, which arrived earlier this year. They’ll also enter and exit a hyperbaric chamber, which is necessary because the
Central Interceptor tunnel will reach depths up to 110 metres, as well as travel underneath the Manukau Harbour.
The Central Interceptor is the biggest wastewater infrastructure project in New Zealand. The tunnel will travel from
Grey Lynn to the Māngere Wastewater Treatment Plant. It will store as well as convey wastewater and will clear up 80 per
cent of wet weather overflows into Auckland waterways.