Advertisement
Advertisement
cut-and-cover
[ kuht-n-kuhv-er ]
noun
- a method for digging a tunnel, laying pipe, etc., by cutting a trench, constructing the tunnel or laying the pipe in it, and covering with the excavated material.
cut-and-cover
adjective
- designating a method of constructing a tunnel by excavating a cutting to the required depth and then backfilling the excavation over the tunnel roof
51³Ô¹Ï History and Origins
Origin of cut-and-cover1
Example Sentences
Some of the tunnels will be created using a cut-and-cover method - without the need for boring machines.
Not only that, but the clock’s foundation was integrated into the cut-and-cover station’s own structure, attached by steel rebar, when tunnel builders poured a huge slab of concrete in 1988 forming the lid.
In the discussions on how to proceed with the missing link, I have never heard of a possible cut-and-cover solution.
Beverly Hills had agreed grudgingly and in principle to let a 10-mile, maximum 10-lane freeway run through town, so long as it was dug down at least 20 feet below ground level, its hideousness concealed from residents and real estate appraisers under a camouflaged “cut-and-cover,†and also that there would be no on- or off-ramps in BH itself.
Those include shallow “cut-and-cover†construction where possible, they say.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Browse