The new Port Mann Water Supply Tunnel will more than double the capacity of the existing water main, and help ensure continued reliable delivery of clean, safe drinking water to the municipalities south of the Fraser River. The new main is also designed to withstand a major earthquake.

"The goal of this major infrastructure project is to construct a seismically resistant water main that will not be damaged by river scour, and will meet the needs of future growth in our region," said Metro Vancouver Chair Greg Moore.

"This new water main will replace the existing 40-year-old crossing, which was damaged by river scour. This tunnel construction is truly an amazing engineering feat," he added.

The tunnel is approximately 30m below the river bed, and was constructed between two 60m-deep vertical shafts, in which the 80m-long TBM was lowered in February 2014 and removed on July 17.

Now that the tunnel is complete, a new 2.1m-diameter welded steel water main will be installed in the tunnel and shafts, and will connect to the existing water transmission system by means of two new valve chambers, located at the top of each shaft.

Installation of the new water main and construction of the south valve chamber will commence this summer, and the CAD 240M (USD 185M) project is scheduled to be completed in fall 2016.

"This complex crossing of the Fraser River by a tunnel boring machine under very difficult ground conditions is a major technical achievement," said Darrell Mussatto, Chair of Metro Vancouver’s Utilities Committee.
The 3.5m-diameter, 1km-long tunnel housing the main crosses between Coquitlam’s Maquabeak Park on the north side of the river, and the CN Thornton Yard in Surrey on the south side.

Construction on the Port Mann Water Supply Tunnel project began in 2011.