It took 17 years, €11 billion and nine lives to
build it, but the Gotthard Base Tunnel has finally opened through the Swiss
Alps.
The incredible record-breaking tunnel runs for
57km, under 2,300 meters of solid mountainous rock, and trains can pass along
it at speeds of up to 250kph.
Designed to alleviate heavy alpine traffic and
combat rising CO2 emissions, more than 300 freight and passenger trains will
whisk through the tunnel each day once it becomes fully operational in
December.
Swiss train
starts inaugural trip through world's longest tunnel #gottardo2016
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Construction began on the monster project in 1999
and, over the following 17 years, engineers blasted through more than 70 types
of rock and excavated 31 million tons of material to construct the tunnel.
The opening ceremony drew Italian Prime Minister
Matteo Renzi, Swiss Federal President Johann Schneider-Ammann, French President
Francois Hollande and German Chancellor Angela Merkel who sat together in a VIP
carriage for the maiden voyage of the first train through the tunnel.
The tunnel, which links the Dutch port of
Rotterdam and Italy’s Genoa via Germany, has been welcomed as a new symbol of
European unity, Reuters
reports.
Trains can speed through the tunnel in just 17 minutes, cutting travel time between Zurich and Lugano by 45 minutes to a journey that will last just under two hours.
Swiss Declare Alps Tamed As Gotthard Rail
Reuters reports that Switzerland opens the
world's longest and deepest rail tunnel through the heart of the Alps on
Wednesday in an engineering marvel that stands as a symbol of European unity at
a time of increasing fragmentation.
The 57.1-km (35.5 mile)-long Gotthard Base
Tunnel, 17 years under construction and designed to last a century, is part of
a 23 billion Swiss franc infrastructure project to speed passengers and cargo
by rail under the mountain chain that divides Europe's north and south.
Typically Swiss, the project that federal
transport office director Peter Fueglistaler called "a masterpiece of
timing, cost and policy" came in on schedule and on budget.
High-speed trains will whisk passengers in 17
minutes through a passage that took days until the first Alpine rail tunnel
opened in 1882. Around 260 freight trains and 65 passenger trains will traverse
the two-tube tunnel daily once final testing ends later this year.
The Swiss, as a rule rail fanatics, are throwing
a party to mark the event that will draw the leaders of all its neighboring
countries in a show of European solidarity.
"It is just part of the Swiss
identity," Fueglistaler said of the Swiss fondness for major engineering
feats. "For us, conquering the Alps is like the Dutch exploring the
oceans."
The tunnel along Europe's main rail line that
connects the ports of Rotterdam in the north to Genoa in the south snakes
through the mountains as much as 2.3 km below daylight and through rock as hot
as 46 degrees Celsius (114.8°F).
The rail route goes over the pass now in a series
of loops and tunnels. The new flat route means even heavy trains will need only
one locomotive rather than two or three.
Engineers had to dig and blast through 73 kinds
of rock as hard as granite and as soft as sugar. Nine workers died.
Swiss voters -- despite opposition at times from
the government and parliament -- supported the gargantuan rail project in a
series of binding referendums in the 1990s.
Fittingly, the first ones to travel the tunnel at
the official opening will be 500 lucky winners plus guests from the 130,000 who
entered a ticket lottery for the inaugural trip.
The overall project includes the Loetschberg rail
tunnel that has already opened, the Cereti tunnel still being built and
renovations to make rail tunnels at least 4 meters high at the corners to be
able to handle big freight containers. Work is due to finish in 2020.
The mammoth rail venture is being financed by value-added
and fuel taxes, road charges on heavy vehicles and state loans that are due to
be repaid within a decade.
Major contractors included
Alpiq, Balfour Beatty, Thales and Heitkamp.
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