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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
Barney Davis

Shock as ‘bubbling’ puddle caused by HS2 tunnelling forms in west London rugby club

A “bubbling” puddle has opened up on a west London rugby pitch as HS2 workers bore a tunnel deep underground to Euston.

A dogwalker stumbled on the bizarre phenomenon at Ruislip RFC on Sunday morning - a month after a mystery foam bubbled up to the surface nearby.

Video shows a murky brown puddle bubbling vigorously behind a sealed-off area of the playing fields that backs onto a primary school.

Locals reported two more areas being cordoned off by HS2 security on regular patrols to keep the walkers and children away.

Sources say air trapped in the ground is being forced upwards as engineers fill tiny gaps around the tunnel with grout. The tiny pockets of air then bubble up to the surface through the waterlogged ground.

It is expected to continue as workers continue to bore the tunnel towards central London.

Last month a mystery brown foam bubbled up on the same field forming a pool “most likely caused” by one of the tunnelling machines passing through a small pre-existing borehole.

Despite the slurry pool being cleared away, locals raised concerns as to what could happen when digging passes under populated areas as the £100bn project continues to bore 13 miles of tunnels towards Euston.

A dogwalker told the Standard: “It is concerning it keeps happening. HS2 has been stationed in the rugby club car park since the original incident and have been patrolling the site every hour.

“They’ve also cordoned off two more areas. One with gas or air coming out and another huge puddle.”

The bubbling appeared the week after it was revealed the HS2 high-speed rail line may not arrive at Euston for almost 20 years, according to Labour MPs.

Labour shadow transport secretary Louise Haigh said leaked Government documents “suggest it will terminate on the outskirts of London until 2041”.

Her remarks appear to confirm fears that Old Oak Common, a new interchange station being built in north-west London, will become HS2’s London terminus until Euston’s HS2 station is finally finished after construction was delayed in a bid to ease soaring costs on the £100bn-plus project.

A HS2 spokeswoman said: “Air appears to have been forced to the surface through waterlogged ground via a pre-existing borehole during tunnelling operations. The area has been temporarily fenced off and remains safe.”

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