SEATTLE — For an entire year, the world’s largest tunnel-boring machine has been stuck deep below this city’s waterfront. Engineers still don’t know why “Bertha,” the 326-foot long, 2,000-ton behemoth custom built to create a nearly two-mile long tunnel under downtown Seattle, isn’t working.
Bertha’s malfunction is delaying the most ambitious infrastructure project in the city’s recent history. After a 2001 earthquake damaged the Alaskan Way Viaduct, a two-level state highway that runs along Seattle’s waterfront, Washington state set out on a multi-billion dollar project to build a tunnel underneath its largest city, connecting an industrial area near major port facilities with transportation routes bypassing the crowded downtown streets.
But the city will have to wait. Chris Dixon, a top executive at Seattle Tunnel Partners, the contractors group picked to head the construction project, said last week that an effort to retrieve and fix Bertha will push the completion date back to August 2017 — nearly two years after the tunnel’s original expected debut date of December 2015. And even that projected delay may be optimistic.
Supporters of the tunnel project include Gov. Jay Inslee, D, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray, most of the city council and major businesses in the area that depend on the thoroughfare for transporting their goods into and out of one of the West Coast’s busiest ports. But even among their ranks, some are beginning to mention the tunnel project in the same breath as Boston’s Big Dig, the series of tunnels and bridges that took two decades to build at a cost nearly 10 times initial projections.