The Changing Face of the Tunneling Industry: The Role of the
ITA, Partnership, and Innovation
Posted by Martin Knights on the Robbins website | The Future
of Tunnelling
Martin Knights graduated with a degree in Civil Engineering
in 1970 and joined the Second River Mersey Road tunnel project as a site
engineer in Liverpool, UK as his first TBM project. The major feature of this
2.5 mile long twin tunnel project was the refurbished 35 ft diameter Robbins
TBM, which had previously driven a number of water supply tunnels at the Mangla
Dam in Pakistan. Knights worked in several consultancy firms on a number of
high profile tunnelling projects over several decades, most recently as the
Managing Director and Sr. Vice President for CH2M/Halcrow. He was also
president of the International Tunnelling Association (ITA) from 2007-2010.
He is currently an independent consultant with his own company, Martin Knights
Consulting.
At the recent ITA Training Course in Bergen, Norway, which
preceded the World Tunnel Congress, I gave a lecture about the development of
Soft Ground TBMs from Victorian times until now. It took a bit of research: I
trawled through reference books and talked to experts in the TBM world. During
the research I looked at project specifications for big projects carried out in
the past 40 or so years, and was struck by the level of technical detail and
requirements that engineers stipulated in the contract documents: there seemed
to be a tendency for over-specification that imprisoned the contractor and
his equipment suppliers to past tried-and-tested practices. Where was the
opportunity to innovate and trial new ideas by those best suited to introduce
best and new practices?
That reminded me of Lok Home’s [Robbins president] challenge
to me in November 2009 at the Hamburg, Germany STUVA Exhibition and Conference.
Lok and l, and other colleagues in ITA and the tunnelling world, took part in
an industry round table talk. I was President of ITA then and the two-hour
discussion concluded with Lok asking me, “So, Martin, what can I and the
industry do for ITA? We provide sponsorship to ITA, like other leading
tunnelling companies; we fill the exhibition halls; we host social
gatherings during ITA conferences, and we give lectures promoting new products.
But we as equipment manufacturers and suppliers want to play a bigger technical
role.”
Stung by the realisation that ITA had, by default, missed a
trick, and was, in effect, excluding the very talent that provided innovation
in tunnelling, I set about forming the then-new ITA technical
forum ITAtech. I say “I”, but in fact myself, Lok, Tom Melbye of Normet,
Felix Amberg of Amberg Engineering, and colleagues from Herrenknecht, Mapei,
Atlas Copco, and others set out over three months to prepare the ground to
launch ITAtech as a premier promoter within ITA of technology and innovation.
Our purpose was to prepare independent and commonly-agreed technical guidelines
and evidence endorsed by the whole international tunnelling industry,
which is what ITAtech continues to do. It provides manufacturing, installation,
equipment and materials guidelines for Contractors and Designers and creates confidence
for tunnel owners that the “brand” of the ITA is overseeing this important
knowledge transfer.
The initial 2009 meeting that led to the ITAtech forum. Left
to right: Bill Hansmire, Gerhard Robeller, Olivier Vion, Gunnar Nord, Martin
Knights, Brian Fulcher, Pekka Nieminen, Lok Home, David Caiden, Daniel
Ruckstuhl
As I talked to the Bergen delegates this year, it was
obvious to me that soft ground urban tunnelling owes a debt to the development
of TBMs over the past 40 years…and particularly to the past 10 years. We can
now do things that were too difficult to do way back then. It’s no coincidence
that the innovations in the last 50 years were led by TBM companies like
Robbins, Lovat, Seli, Herrenknecht, etc. The leadership and pioneering spirit
could have only been driven by the individual passion that comes from a “family
run” business. With time, growth and ownership has been passed on, but the
stewardship and spirit of innovation in tunnelling lives on. ITAtech has tried
to capture that spirit. Membership of its Steering Board and Activity groups
relies on that desire of industry to educate, improve and share.
A recent President of the UK Institution of Civil Engineers
compared our fragmented industry processes with the manufacturing, aircraft and
car industry. In effect he said “Why–unlike those industries–do we separate
inception, planning, and design from assembly, installation and construction?”
The infrastructure and mining industries rely on so many processes and
partnerships to deliver projects precisely because they are so fragmented and
siloed.
Contemporary procurement encourages more partnerships, but this
doesn’t make it any less convoluted. We see the rise of the dreaded words
“industry supply chain” and “second and third tier partners”, where it strikes
me that we’re airbrushing out the identity of the very “tier” of industry that
has to innovate and provide the substance that nourishes the technical
solutions that feature in new infrastructure developments.
I suggest that owners and clients get better access to and
value from these innovating “tiers”—in many cases the equipment manufacturers
and suppliers. In so many cases I have seen technical solutions get
misinterpreted as ideas and solutions move up and down the so-called
supply chain, begging for recognition, understanding and realisation of value.
I’m sure that this is not intended…but it happens. By
validating and bringing innovations to the forefront through organizations like
the ITAtech, we can improve some of the convoluted procurement and technical
approval processes. However if we want to continue to see advancements like
we’ve seen in urban soft ground tunnelling in recent decades, we should seek to
streamline manufacturing and procurement, and to work closely with all “tiers”
involved—second, third, and on up. By MARTIN KNIGHTS