Lower carbon than conventional bored piles. Faster cycle time than waiting on concrete cure. Retensionable for the 100-year design life. The engineering decisions that turn 1.76 million pylons from impossible into routine.
The SBC viaduct programme requires approximately 1.76 million pylon foundations across the national network. Phase 0 alone needs 183,000 foundations across 2,410 kilometres of multimodal viaduct from Melbourne to Brisbane. Conventional drilled pier construction cannot deliver this.
Conventional 2-metre bored piles consume approximately 94 cubic metres of concrete each, take 7-14 days from drilling start to load-bearing capacity, cannot be re-tensioned or adjusted, and rely on imported drilling equipment and offshore engineering. Multiplied across 1.76 million pylons, the carbon footprint, the cycle time, and the offshore-procurement bill all become deal-breakers for the programme.
So we engineered a different foundation system. Filed five Australian Provisional Patents to protect it — the Anchor Tension System (ATS) Patent Family. And built it around three engineering principles that turn the SBC pylon programme from impossible into routine.
Substituting volume for efficiency
Conventional drilled piers are massive carbon sinks. The dominant carbon source is cement — every cubic metre of concrete embeds approximately 240 kilograms of CO2 from cement manufacture alone. A standard 2-metre × 30-metre bored pile contains around 94 cubic metres of concrete, embedding approximately 22.5 tonnes of CO2 in cement before any other emissions are counted.
The SBC pylon foundation uses a fundamentally different approach. The caisson is a thin-walled precast concrete liner, not a solid concrete column. The tensile capacity comes from steel tubular tension members carrying the post-tensioning load. The compression capacity comes from the cutter-head-as-anchor and the bearing formation below — not from a 94-cubic-metre concrete cylinder.
Net result: substantially less concrete per foundation, with the difference made up in steel tubular tension members at much higher load-per-tonne efficiency.
~94 m³ concrete per foundation. Approximately 22.5 tonnes embodied CO2 per pile in cement alone. Steel reinforcement cage adds approximately 2-4 tonnes CO2.
~25-27 tonnes CO2/foundation
~25 m³ concrete in caisson lining (around 73% reduction). Embodied CO2 in cement approximately 6 tonnes. Steel tubular tension members approximately 4-6 tonnes CO2.
~10-12 tonnes CO2/foundation
Across Phase 0's 183,000 foundations, the saving is approximately 2.5 million tonnes of embodied CO2 versus conventional bored pile construction. Across the full national network of 1.76 million pylons, the saving is approximately 24 million tonnes — equivalent to roughly 5% of Australia's annual CO2 emissions, in foundations alone.
All figures indicative pending detailed engineering. Cement CO2 intensity assumed 240 kg/m³ at typical Australian portland blend; steel CO2 intensity assumed 1.85 t/t for blast furnace steel.
The sacrificial cutter is a consumable, not a tool
Conventional drilled pier construction has a multi-day cycle. Drill the bore. Insert the reinforcement cage. Tremie-pour concrete from the bottom. Wait 7-14 days for cure. Verify capacity. Move the rig. Repeat.
For a wind farm with 100+ turbines, or a viaduct programme with thousands of pylons, the foundation cycle time is the binding constraint. Rig mobilisation costs are enormous. Idle rigs lose money. The faster a foundation can be completed and the rig moved, the lower the per-foundation cost and the faster the programme advances.
The SBC pylon foundation eliminates the cure-wait. The caisson is precast concrete — already cured before it leaves the factory. The cutter head is permanent at the base of the bore — no waiting for it to be retrieved. Post-tensioning is applied through pre-assembled tubular tension members run as a single operation. The foundation reaches operational tension within hours of drilling completion, not days.
The traditional drilling industry has always used drill bits as consumables. You don't recover them, refurbish them, or worry about their resale value. They're a budgeted line item: this many metres of formation, that many bits, here's the cost.
The SBC pylon foundation extends this principle from drill bits to cutter heads. The cutter is permanent at the foundation base — sacrificial by design. It performs the drilling function during installation and then becomes the permanent anchor for the post-tensioning system over the foundation's 100-year service life. The cost of the cutter is a one-off capital cost per foundation, equivalent to the cost of consumables on a conventional drilled pile project.
Engineers reading this — yes, the cutter head is hybrid construction. Steel for the drilling phase. Concrete inserts for the long-term compression load (no buried-steel corrosion concern for the bearing path). Corrosion-resistant alloy (13Cr or higher) for the post-tensioning anchor receptacle, designed for 100-year sustained tensile load in saturated soil. The patent specification covers the embodiments. See the patent record →
Designed for the 100-year service life
High-speed rail viaducts have extremely tight differential settlement tolerances. Maglev tighter still. The Japanese Shinkansen tolerance is approximately ±2mm vertical alignment per 10 metres of viaduct. The SBC maglev specification operates at 600 km/h — alignment tolerance is non-negotiable.
Conventional bored pile foundations are set and forget. If a pile settles by 10mm over five years, the response options are: (1) accept the settlement and operate within a degraded alignment envelope; (2) implement an underpinning project — multi-million-dollar civil works to install supplementary foundations adjacent to the original; or (3) replace the foundation entirely. None of these are routine maintenance operations. All of them disrupt service.
The SBC pylon foundation is engineered for serviceability across the 100-year design life. The post-tensioning architecture is reversible — tension can be released, the structure adjusted, and tension reapplied. The auxiliary tension support toolkit (Patent #2 · AU 2026903952) provides additional engineering options:
Built in Australia · Owned by Australians
The SBC pylon foundation is engineered to be built using Australian materials and Australian manufacturing capability. This is not a "buy local where convenient" preference. It is a structural design requirement.
The HSRA programme sends an estimated $51-60 billion offshore for foreign rolling stock, foreign tunnel boring machines, and foreign engineering. The SBC pylon programme inverts this: 95% Australian content versus HSRA's 35-45%.
For consortium partners, government procurement officers, and infrastructure investors evaluating the SBC programme: the foundation engineering is the load-bearing argument. If the foundations cannot be built at the required scale, speed, carbon footprint, and Australian-content target, the SBC programme fails. The foundations are where the programme either works or doesn't.
The SBC pylon foundation is engineered to make the programme work:
This is what foundation engineering looks like when it is designed for a 100-year continental infrastructure programme rather than a one-off building site. The SBC viaduct programme is feasible because the foundations are feasible. The foundations are feasible because the engineering protects against every failure mode that conventional construction accepts as inevitable.