By Mia Jaworski
UConn Journalism
Heavy rain overwhelms old city sewer systems, spilling raw sewage into rivers and waterways. It’s a problem cities around the world have faced for decades, and one growing more urgent as climate change fuels more intense and frequent storms.
One solution that’s gained traction: massive underground storage tunnels built deep beneath city streets.
In Chicago and Milwaukee, where combined sewer overflows used to be a regular threat, deep tunnel systems have drastically reduced the number and severity of overflows.
Although these tunnels do not address the root cause of CSOs—namely, outdated and inadequate 19th-century infrastructure—they serve as a critical solution to prevent immediate environmental and public health risks.
Few projects rival the scale and impact of Chicago’s Tunnel and Reservoir Plan (TARP), also known as “the Deep Tunnel.” The system spans more than 100 miles, with tunnels as large as 33 feet in diameter and buried as deep as 350 feet.
Chicago
Launched in the 1970s and partially activated in 1984, the system continues to expand and is expected to reach full capacity by 2029. According to the Metropolitan Water Reclamation
District of Greater Chicago, TARP will store about 20 billion gallons once completed in 2029.
TARP has held back overflows that would have otherwise sent untreated waste into the Chicago River, Calumet River, and Lake Michigan.
The system includes four tunnel systems and reservoirs like the Majewski, Thornton, and McCook Reservoirs. The Thornton Reservoir has entirely eliminated CSOs within its service area since 2020.
The Metropolitan Water Reclamation District of Greater Chicago claims that TARP has significantly reduced CSOs from an average of 100 days per year to 50. The environmental benefits have been clear, with the number of fish species in local rivers nearly doubling and water quality improving dramatically.
“Thanks to the tunnels and many other improvements,” the MMSD says, “we have captured and cleaned 98.6 percent of all the stormwater and wastewater that’s entered the regional sewer system.”
Milwaukee
Operational since 1993, Milwaukee’s system has prevented more than 160.2 billion gallons of pollution from entering Lake Michigan, according to the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District (MMSD), which attributes that success to the tunnel.
For comparison, the national goal for cities with similar systems is 85 percent.
The system’s beginnings date to 1972, when the State of Illinois filed a lawsuit against the city and its sewerage commission for pollution. The case eventually reached the
U.S. Supreme Court. Five years later, a formal agreement between the Milwaukee Metropolitan Sewerage District and the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) committed the region to reducing sewer overflows.
These pivotal moments spurred the creation of the Water Pollution Abatement Program (WPAP), which MMSD credits with delivering “major improvements to the regional wastewater treatment system.
Accompanying this environmental shift was a major structural and financial commitment. In 1982, the MMSD was established. Between the 1980s and early 2000s, the region invested $3 billion into water pollution abatement, $1 billion of which funded the deep tunnel system.
According to the district, those efforts reduced pollution from an average of “8 billion to 9 billion gallons per year.” By 2010, an additional $1 billion was allocated through the Overflow Reduction Plan, expanding the system’s capacity and improving its long-term performance.
Here’s how the colossal tunnel was constructed:
In 1993, 19.4 miles of tunnels were dug 275 to 340 feet underground, with diameters ranging from 17 to 32 feet. The tunnels captured 405 million gallons of stormwater and sewage, providing an immediate boost in flood control and pollution reduction. While this marked a significant milestone, it was just the beginning of the journey.
The project took another step in 2006. The system grew by 7.1 miles, with tunnels dug 120 to 165 feet underground and a 20-foot diameter. This expansion added another 89 million gallons of storage, increasing the system’s ability to manage overflow.
By 2010, the final stretch of tunnels was completed, adding 2 more miles, 300 to 325 feet underground, with a 21-foot diameter. This section added 27 million gallons of storage, bringing the total capacity to 521 million gallons across all stages. With this last component in place, the system became fully operational.
It’s not just a Midwest solution. Cities like Boston, Washington D.C., Atlanta, and even London have embraced tunnel systems to tackle sewer overflows and modernize aging infrastructure.
While each has taken a slightly different approach, their shared goal remains the same: to store excess stormwater underground and keep pollution out of rivers, lakes, and coastal waters.
Hartford’s tunnel isn’t a carbon copy of Chicago’s or Milwaukee’s—but it doesn’t have to be. It will benefit from the insights of cities that have already dug deep—literally—to address similar wastewater challenges. If it works as planned, it could be a major step in solving Hartford’s CSO problem.
TOP IMAGE: Chicago dug this reservoir, McCook Reservoir, to hold untreated waste from its deep tunnel system. This is how the reservoir looked on May 16, 2025. Photo from mwrd.org, Chicago’s Metropolitan Water Reclamation District.