Bhaskar Thapa | |
---|---|
Born | September 7, 1963 |
Died | June 19, 2013 San Francisco, California[1] |
Alma mater | UC Berkeley, Carnegie Mellon University |
Bhaskar Thapa (Nepali: भाष्कर थापा) (September 7, 1963 – June 19, 2013) was a Nepalese-American tunnel engineer who led the engineering of the Caldecott Tunnel Fourth Bore project.[2] He is considered an expert of the New Austrian tunnelling method (NATM). The Caldecott Tunnel passes through California State Route 24 and connects Alameda County and Contra Costa County, California.[3] The project had an estimated cost of $391 million[2] He had presented his tunnel technology programme at Ministry of Physical Infrastructure and Transport (Nepal) and was very keen to work on Kathmandu Terai Fast Track.[4][5] He is a member of Jacobs Associates, an engineering firm based on California. He has received his PhD on geotechnical engineering from UC Berkeley and an engineering degrees from Carnegie Mellon University.[3] He died from heart failure while playing tennis on June 19, 2013.[1] A plaque rests above the Caldecott Tunnel in Oakland, California in tribute of Bhaskar's work and life.[3]
Bhaskar enjoyed seeing the fruits of his labors after when the tunneling and final lining were completed on this challenging project. He was incredibly proud of this achievement, and we often spoke about the pride he would feel when driving his two boys and wife through the tunnel. -Michael McRae, Principal, Jacobs Associates[6]
In 2016, the Bhaskar Tejshree Memorial Foundation[7] released a compilation book of works done on tunnel engineering by Bhaskar.[8]
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