
Photos show huge HS2 machine being pulled out of the ground
The 850-tonne Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) - named Caroline - was brought to the surface at the Green Park Way site in Greenford, west London, on Sunday (May 25).
Photos show the mammoth machine, with a cutterhead spanning 9.48 metres in diameter, being pulled out of the vent shaft in one piece, using a large gantry crane.
The images also show several flags from around the world hung to the surface, including Great Britain, Austria, Italy, and Turkey.
The machine is called Caroline. (Image: HS2 / SWNS)
The tunnelling machine concluded its 5-mile journey from West Ruislip in April, arriving in an underground reception chamber.
The machine, named by a local school after the astronomer Caroline Herschel, is the second of four TBM's used to construct part of the 8.4-mile-long Northolt Tunnel.
This new tunnel will take HS2 trains from Old Oak Common Station to the outskirts of the capital.
The machine will make new tunnels for HS2. (Image: HS2 / SWNS)
In total, TBM Caroline excavated over 1.2 million tonnes of earth and installed 4,217 tunnel rings, HS2 said.
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The first machine to arrive at Green Park Way, named Sushila, was removed in March this year.
Malcolm Codling, client director for HS2 Ltd, said: 'We're immensely proud of the work we have done to complete the second breakthrough for the Northolt Tunnel underneath the capital.
'As we focus on delivering Britain's new high speed railway between London and the West Midlands, we are gearing up for our most productive year to date on this stretch of the line.'
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Photos show huge HS2 machine being pulled out of the ground
The 850-tonne Tunnel Boring Machine (TBM) - named Caroline - was brought to the surface at the Green Park Way site in Greenford, west London, on Sunday (May 25). Photos show the mammoth machine, with a cutterhead spanning 9.48 metres in diameter, being pulled out of the vent shaft in one piece, using a large gantry crane. The images also show several flags from around the world hung to the surface, including Great Britain, Austria, Italy, and Turkey. The machine is called Caroline. (Image: HS2 / SWNS) The tunnelling machine concluded its 5-mile journey from West Ruislip in April, arriving in an underground reception chamber. The machine, named by a local school after the astronomer Caroline Herschel, is the second of four TBM's used to construct part of the 8.4-mile-long Northolt Tunnel. This new tunnel will take HS2 trains from Old Oak Common Station to the outskirts of the capital. The machine will make new tunnels for HS2. (Image: HS2 / SWNS) In total, TBM Caroline excavated over 1.2 million tonnes of earth and installed 4,217 tunnel rings, HS2 said. Recommended Reading The first machine to arrive at Green Park Way, named Sushila, was removed in March this year. Malcolm Codling, client director for HS2 Ltd, said: 'We're immensely proud of the work we have done to complete the second breakthrough for the Northolt Tunnel underneath the capital. 'As we focus on delivering Britain's new high speed railway between London and the West Midlands, we are gearing up for our most productive year to date on this stretch of the line.'


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One of the nieces explained: 'Following his retirement from Eton College, Norman bought and lived in a house in Bermondsey. "When he died in 2013, two of his sisters had the unenviable task of sorting through and emptying the contents. "There were lots of personal papers which one sister carted away and stored in her loft. The papers lay dormant until she moved into a care home almost a decade later. "Her daughters came across the papers and considered shredding everything. "Fortunately, they checked with Norman's nieces and nephews because he'd always been a presence in our lives. The papers were saved by Turing's friend, Norman. (Image: SWNS) Adding: "One cousin felt the Turing and Forster papers might be of interest to collectors. "After taking them home for a closer look, she decided to attend a local valuation day hosted by Hansons Auctioneers, who consigned them for research with their specialist saleroom, Rare Book Auctions. 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He said the exchange of offprints had historically been a method of correspondence between scholars and is prized by collectors as representing the first separate edition of an important work. He added: 'Nothing could've prepared me for what I was about to find in that carrier bag. "These seemingly plain papers-perfectly preserved in the muted colours of their unadorned, academic wrappers - represent the foundations of computer science and modern digital computing. "Literature has always been my forte, not mathematics, so the past few months of intensively researching and cataloguing these papers has left me feeling that Alan Turing was superhuman. The collection includes letters. (Image: SWNS) "For me, it's like studying the language of another planet, something composed by an ultra-intelligent civilisation." The collection also includes The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis, which dates from 1952, and is Turing's lesser-known masterpiece of mathematical biology. It has since become a basic model in theoretical biology, describing what have come to be known as 'Turing patterns'. Mr Spencer said: 'As recently as 2023, a study confirmed Turing's mathematical model hypothesis as outlined in The Chemical Basis of Morphogenesis. "In this way the papers are still alive. They're still relevant and groundbreaking. 'We even have Turing's first published paper from 1935 – Equivalence of Left and Right Almost Periodicity – which is simply a single sheet of paper. The collection is set to get interest from around the world. (Image: SWNS) "And the provenance couldn't be better. The archive was gifted to Turing's friend and fellow mathematician Norman Arthur Routledge (1928-2013) by Turing's mother Ethel - and we have her handwritten letter explaining this." In the letter, dated May 16, 1956, Ethel Turing says: 'I have to-day sent by registered post 13 of Alan's off-prints...I don't know what people in Cambridge thought of the manner of Alan's death. 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'Hardly anything like this appears on the open market, so predicting hammer prices is fortune-telling." Adding: "I suspect interest will be strong in Silicon Valley – where Turing's influence shines brightly – but it would be lovely to see material acquired by institutions who could share things with the public."