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    HS2 Chiltern tunnel porous portals: concrete sequencing lessons for engineers

    January 28, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    HS2 Chiltern tunnel porous portals: concrete sequencing lessons for engineers

    First reported on New Civil Engineer

    30 Second Briefing

    Construction of the porous portals at the north and south ends of HS2’s 16km Chiltern tunnel required tightly sequenced technical concrete pours, with complex formwork and reinforcement detailing to achieve the perforated façade geometry and acoustic performance. Engineering leads coordinated staged casting to control heat of hydration, minimise shrinkage cracking around the voids, and maintain cover to reinforcement in thin web sections. The approach signals future demand for similarly precise concrete placement and quality control on high‑speed rail portals where aerodynamic pressure waves and noise attenuation drive geometry.

    Technical Brief

    • Engineering lead described the works as a sequence of “technical concrete pours” rather than conventional portal casting.

    Our Take

    The Chiltern tunnel work sits alongside HS2’s other major underground packages such as the Euston Tunnel TBM drives reported on 27–28 January 2026, signalling that complex tunnelling and portal engineering is now the technical centre of gravity for the UK section of the line.

    With UK construction output forecasts softening and HS2 still highlighted as a key driver in national infrastructure pipelines, technically demanding elements like the Chiltern tunnel portals are likely to face tighter scrutiny on productivity and constructability than earlier phases.

    Our infrastructure coverage shows multiple HS2 items focusing on repeatable methods (for example, the Wendover cut-and-cover ‘green tunnels’ sequencing), so any innovative porous portal pour sequence at the Chiltern tunnel that can be standardised may quickly propagate to other HS2 interfaces in the United Kingdom.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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