Northeast Boundary Tunnel Project

Tunnel Image

Wrapping Up Construction of the Northeast Boundary Tunnel

The commissioning of the Northeast Boundary Tunnel (NEBT) completes the Anacostia River Tunnel system. The NEBT was placed in operation on September 15, 2023. It completes all the CSO controls required for the Anacostia River, providing a 98% reduction in CSO overflow volume in an average rainfall year. In addition to controlling CSOs, the construction of the NEBT reduces the chance of flooding in chronic flood areas from approximately 50 to 7 percent in any given year.

The federal government built much of the District’s sewer infrastructure in the late 1800s and early 1900s. The sewer system serves the dual purpose of collecting wastewater from homes and businesses and stormwater runoff from streets and properties. Referred to as combined sewers, these systems continued to serve the District as development transformed low-density rural areas into densely populated neighborhoods. The 19th-century system was undersized when originally constructed and that condition has been exacerbated by population growth and development. This has contributed to the chronic flooding in the Bloomingdale and LeDroit Park neighborhoods, the Rhode Island Avenue Metro Station area, and Mount Olivet Road NE for decades.

To mitigate the problem, DC Water constructed the NEBT to connect with the existing sewer system, significantly mitigating sewer flooding while improving the water quality of the Anacostia River. Combined sewage captured by the NEBT would eventually be transmitted to the Blue Plains Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plant. The NEBT is the largest component of the Clean Rivers Project and starts just south of the RFK Stadium and extends north to Rhode Island Avenue NE and west to R Street NW.

Scope of Work

  • Installation of 27,000 foot long, 23 foot diameter reinforced concrete tunnel
  • Tunnel approximately 50 to 160 feet deep
  • Construction of diversion facilities sited near chronic flood areas to relieve the existing sewer system and divert combined sewer flows to the NEBT
  • Ventilation control facilities to regulate air flow in the tunnel system

Partners

DC Water worked closely with multiple stakeholders, including residents, Advisory Neighborhood Commissions, District Department of Transportation, District Department of Public Works, District Department of Energy and Environment, Office of the Deputy Mayor for Planning and Economic Development, CSX, Amtrak, District Department of General Services, DC Sports and Entertainment Commission, National Park Service, and the Washinton Metropolitan Area Transit Authority. 

 

Project Location Map

 

Contact Information

Clean Rivers Public Outreach:

(202) 787-4400

Email: dccleanrivers@dcwater.com

clean river
Clean Rivers

The Clean Rivers Project is DC Water's ongoing program to reduce combined sewer overflows into the District's waterways - the Anacostia and Potomac Rivers and Rock Creek. The Project is a massive infrastructure and support program designed to capture and clean water during heavy rainfalls before it ever reaches our rivers.

Contact details

call customer

Call our Northeast 
Boundary Tunnel 
Project Hotline

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    ALEXA JOHN

    (800) 988-6151

    Senior Public Outreach Officer

  • call us
  • Email us

Upcoming Meeting

Board of Directors Meeting

April 24, 2023

Monday 9:00 AM

Announcement

West Potomac Park Drive SW Intersection
DC Water adds new road through West Potomac Park, improving access during Potomac River Tunnel construction

(Washington, DC) – DC Water today announces the opening of West Potomac Park Drive SW, a new road constructed as part of the Potomac River Tunnel (

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