London Laocoön
[Image: Machines slide beneath the streets, via Crossrail].
The Crossrail tunnels in London—for now, Europe's largest construction project, scheduled to finish in 2018—continue to take shape, created in a "tunneling marathon under the streets of London" that aims to add 26 new miles of underground track for commuter rail traffic.
It's London as Laocoön, wrapped in tunnel-boring machines, mechanical snakes that coil through their own hollow nests beneath the city.
[Image: Looking down through shafts into the subcity, via Crossrail].
What interested me the most in all this, however, was simply that fact that the first tunneling machine put to work in this round of excavation is called Phyllis—
[Image: Phyllis, via Crossrail].
—named after Phyllis Pearsall, widely (but incorrectly?) mythologized as the founder of the legendary A-Z book of London street maps.
There's something very Psychogeography Lite™ in this, weaving your city together from below with a giant machine-needle named after the woman who (supposedly) first walked the streets of the capital, assembling her book of maps, as if the only logical direction to go, once you've mapped the surface of your city, is down, passing through those surfaces to explore larger and darker volumes of urban space.
The Crossrail tunnels in London—for now, Europe's largest construction project, scheduled to finish in 2018—continue to take shape, created in a "tunneling marathon under the streets of London" that aims to add 26 new miles of underground track for commuter rail traffic.
It's London as Laocoön, wrapped in tunnel-boring machines, mechanical snakes that coil through their own hollow nests beneath the city.
[Image: Looking down through shafts into the subcity, via Crossrail].
What interested me the most in all this, however, was simply that fact that the first tunneling machine put to work in this round of excavation is called Phyllis—
[Image: Phyllis, via Crossrail].
—named after Phyllis Pearsall, widely (but incorrectly?) mythologized as the founder of the legendary A-Z book of London street maps.
There's something very Psychogeography Lite™ in this, weaving your city together from below with a giant machine-needle named after the woman who (supposedly) first walked the streets of the capital, assembling her book of maps, as if the only logical direction to go, once you've mapped the surface of your city, is down, passing through those surfaces to explore larger and darker volumes of urban space.
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This is a genuinely astounding blog. Keep doing what you're doing!
Check out Bertha, the largest diameter TBM, arriving in Seattle this year: http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/Projects/Viaduct/About or her twitter page: https://twitter.com/BerthaDigsSR99
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