The Red Hill Site is located on the southern end of the
Island of Oahu, Hawaii, approximately seven miles northwest of downtown
Honolulu. The Site is situated within the Red Hill Fuel Storage
Facility which is operated by the Fleet and Industrial Supply Center
(FISC) and is secured from public access.
The entire Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage project includes a reinforced concrete fueling pier and an underground water-pumping station. Construction on the Red Hill facility began the day after Christmas 1940. While the attack on Pearl Harbor on December 7, 1941, had little effect on the work site itself (which was mainly underground), the arrival of World War II in the Pacific did increase the demand for skilled laborers, especially welders, at the Pearl Harbor navy base. Nevertheless, work on the storage facility proceeded virtually without interruption. Work on the first tank was completed in September 1942, and the entire project was finished in September 1943, nine months ahead of schedule. Each vertical storage tank is 100 feet in diameter and 250
feet high. Lined with quarter-inch steel plate, each
reinforced-concrete tank was rigorously tested during construction for
leaks and pre-stressed with high-pressure grouting between the tank and
the surrounding rock wall. !--History and Heritage of Civil Engineering RED HILL UNDERGROUND FUEL STORAGE FACILITY Conceived in the early years of World War II as a plan to bury four fuel containers horizontally in a hillside at the U.S. Navy facility at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, the Red Hill Underground Fuel Storage Facility ultimately encompassed the design and construction of 20 vertical storage tanks—each large enough to contain a 20-story building—buried in the volcanic hillside and connected by tunnels to a harbor-side pumping station more than two-and-a-half miles away. Using existing rock as a construction shell, the project made use of innovative mining and construction methods that included building each tank from a central vertical shaft drilled 30 feet in diameter and removing all excavated rock through an elaborate system of conveyor belts specially made by the Goodrich Tire Company. Protecting more than 250 million gallons of fuel used by Navy fleets around the world, the Red Hill facility has operated virtually unchanged since its completion. Honolulu, Hawaii Constructed 1940-1943 "We had about 4.5 million barrels of oil out there and
all of it was vulnerable to .50- caliber bullets. Had the Japanese
destroyed the oil, it would have prolonged the war another
two years..." Admiral Chester Nimitz,
Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Navy Pacific Fleet Buildings
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