“…These urban dynamics, which change over time, extend not only horizontally and upward, but also downward. Underground space has more often been used to relieve the pressure on the increasingly overcrowded urban surface [1][2][3][4]. Underground construction has replaced surface construction on a wide scale, especially with respect to networks (cables, sewage, and drainage), transportation (subway, tunnels, and passages), and storage (warehouses, cellars, parking areas, and thermal energy), as well as shelter and protection places (nuclear bunkers, bank vaults, and underpasses) [5].…”