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Bullet-train planners face huge engineering challenge

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A freight train slowly climbs eastbound heading into Tehachapi Pass crossing the Tehachapi Mountains near Caliente in Kern County, California. The train is on the Union Pacific line that winds through town after using many curves, tunnels and a loop to compensate for the climb in elevation between Bakersfield and the town of Tehachapi, was dug in 1874 and is near the route for a bullet train between Los Angeles and San Francisco proposed by the California High-Speed Rail Authority. (Photo by Al Seib/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

(MCT) — LOS ANGELES — Civil War veteran William Hood arrived at the mosquito-infested swamps near Bakersfield in 1874 to build a rail line that would soar through the Tehachapi Mountains, linking the Bay Area and Southern California for the first time.

Hood, Southern Pacific Railroad’s chief assistant engineer, assembled 3,000 Chinese immigrants with picks, shovels and dynamite. They snaked the track up treacherous mountain ridges, twisted it back and forth around canyons and punched it through sheer rock in a series of 18 tunnels — climbing 4,025 vertical feet along the way.

It’s a feat no one has attempted to duplicate. Until now.

A plan as audacious in the 21st century as Hood’s was in the 19th century is taking shape on the drawing boards of California’s bullet train planners. The crossing of not only the Tehachapi Mountains but the San Gabriel Mountains is seizing the imagination of engineers who see it as the greatest design challenge of the $68 billion project.

“It is the project of the century,” said University of California, Berkeley, civil engineering professor Bill Ibbs, who has worked on other high-speed rail systems around the world.

The sheer scale and scope of the bullet train’s push into Southern California, including traversing complex seismic hazards, would rival construction of the state’s massive freeway system, water transport networks and its port complexes. It is likely to be viewed in future decades as an engineering marvel — or a costly folly. If nothing else, it is ambitious.

The plan calls for bullet trains to shoot east from Bakersfield at 220 mph, climbing one of the steepest sustained high-speed rail inclines in the world. It would soar over canyons on viaducts as high as a 33-story skyscraper. The line would duck in and out of tunnels up to 500 feet below the rugged surface. It would cross more than half a dozen earthquake faults heading toward L.A.

Tunneling machines as long as a football field will have to be jockeyed into mountain canyons to do the heavy, back-breaking work once left to Chinese laborers. New access roads and a corridor for high-voltage power lines will have to be carved through the Tehachapis to feed power-hungry trains. When completed and fully operational, the bullet train will need an estimated 2.7 million kilowatt hours of electricity each day — about a quarter of Hoover Dam’s average daily output.

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