Swiss mark opening of world's longest and deepest rail tunnel
Helena Bachmann, Special for USA TODAY
6:04 a.m. EDT May 28, 2016
GENEVA
— Switzerland will celebrate an engineering marvel 20 years in the
works on Wednesday: the debut of the world's longest and deepest
railroad tunnel.
The new tunnel through the Alps is 35.5 miles long, exceeding by 2 miles the current record-holder, Japan’s Seikan Tunnel. Some sections lie a record 1.4 miles beneath the mountain's peak.
The
tunnel will carry 325 passenger and freight trains a day, with each
trip taking 20 minutes at speeds up to 150 mph. The goal is to reduce
heavy auto traffic that creates pollution.
“We are not showing off,” Transport Minister Doris Leuthard told Swiss Radio International
about the $8 million grand opening expected to draw 100,000 people.
That's a modest sum to spend to showcase a mammoth project that cost $10
billion and employed thousands of workers.
The tunnel will go
through 7,000-foot Gotthard Mountain. The mountain pass has long served
as Europe's main north-south axis through the Alps, handling 6 million
vehicles a year.
Trucks hauling cargo across the continent’s most densely populated area, stretching from the United Kingdom to Italy, inevitably pass through the Gotthard, often creating congestion.
To
reduce the environmental impact of cars, the Swiss have wanted to shift
traffic from the road to rail. In a 1992 referendum, voters approved
constructing a tunnel to reduce transit time, hauling costs and air
pollution.
Work started in 1996, and the actual excavation using
giant rolling drills 1,345 feet long and weighing 300 tons was completed
in 2010. A 1,970-foot-long machine laid the concrete lining and
drainage pipes. And once 28 million tons of rock were removed, workers
began to install the tracks in two tunnel tubes.
The lengthy time
to complete the project was not unusual given its complexity, said
Kalman Kovari, emeritus professor of tunneling at the Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich and a consultant on the project.
The
geology of the Alps means the hardness of the rocks vary, and “the rate
of excavation per day depends on rock quality,” Kovari told USA TODAY.
Even with high-performance boring machines, “it was clear that the
construction time could not have been reduced substantially,” he added.
Engineers
knew from the beginning that tunneling through the mountain would not
be easy or quick. They’d have to excavate through some hazardous zones
that had crumbling rocks or potential flooding.
The engineers
solved the problem by using steel arches to support the excavation,
a mining technology used for the first time in an underground tunnel.
Other
potential problems had to be tackled before construction could begin.
One was that temperatures at the deepest spots exceeded 100 degrees. So
the air had to be cooled to protect 2,600 workers excavating the rock.
“It
was also important to protect the workers from accidents,” Kovari said.
“Strategies had to be developed to recognize the nature of the rock and
to apply the highest industrial mechanization during excavation.”
Passenger
safety also was a priority. According to AlpTransit, the company in
charge of the project, a series of sophisticated emergency evacuation
sites and alarms are installed along the train route.
The Swiss,
known for carefully crafted watches, chocolates and army knives, are
just as proud of this gargantuan achievement. As the government
boasts on its website, the tunnel “symbolizes Swiss values such as
innovation, precision and reliability.”
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