TUN/Specific/TBT-TUN-012
Tunnel Surveying and Monitoring
Tunnelling & Shafts › Specific › Tunnel Surveying and Monitoring
Tunnel Surveying and Monitoring
Toolbox Talk Record
Ref: TBT-TUN-012 | Issue: 1 | Date: March 2026
| Presenter | Project | ||
| Location | Date |
What?
- Tunnel surveying provides alignment, profile, and deformation data essential for safe and accurate construction.
- Surveyors work in the confined tunnel environment alongside TBM operations, muck trains, and segment erection.
- Monitoring instruments including convergence pins, extensometers, and prisms track ground and lining movement.
- Working near the TBM face exposes surveyors to noise, dust, vibration, and moving machinery hazards.
- Instrument installation on the tunnel crown requires working at height within the confined bore.
- Laser and total station instruments must be used with awareness of eye safety in the enclosed space.
- Emergency evacuation from the tunnel heading may require travelling hundreds of metres to the portal.
- Communication between the survey team and the TBM operator prevents interference with construction activities.
- Survey data accuracy is critical — alignment errors accumulate over the tunnel drive length.
- All tunnel workers including surveyors must carry personal gas monitors and self-rescuers.
Why?
| Confined environment | Surveyors share the confined tunnel space with heavy plant, creating noise, dust, and collision hazards. |
| Data accuracy | Survey errors in tunnel alignment can result in structural problems and costly corrections at breakthrough. |
| Emergency response | Distance from the portal makes tunnel evacuation slow — surveyors must know the escape procedure. |
| Do | Don't |
|
See also: Tunnelling Safety Awareness | Emergency Evacuation From Tunnels |
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