The world's longest railway tunnel is set to open in just over a week - after some 17 years of construction.
Measuring
35.4-miles in length, the Gotthard Base Tunnel (GBT) is 7,545 feet
below the Gotthard massif, cutting through the Swiss Alps.
The
tunnel was first conceived in sketch-form in 1947 but construction
began 17 years ago.
It consists of two single-track tunnels connecting
Erstfeld (Uri) with Bodio (Ticino) and passing below Sedrun
(Graubünden).
The new tunnel through the Swiss Alps will make north-south travel more
fluid, curb air pollution and 'will be a driver of growth in Europe', EU
transport commissioner Violeta Bulc has said
The GBT will displace Japan's 33.46-mile Seikan tunnel as the world's
longest train tunnel and bump the 31.4-mile Channel Tunnel that links
England and France into third place
The World's Longest Rail Tunnel in the Heart of the Swiss Alps
- Length: 57km (the longest rail tunnel in the world)
- Duration of tunnel journey: a little under 20 minutes
- Total length of all the tunnels: 152km (94 miles)
- Highest point of the tunnel: 550m (1,800 feet) above sea level
- Maximum rock cover: 2,300m (7,545 metres)
- Construction time (excluding exploratory work): 17 years
- Excavated material: 28.2 million tonnes
- Total cost: 12.2billion Swiss francs (£8.4billion)
- Tunnel capacity: 260 freight trains and 65 passenger trains per day
- Timetabled speed: freight trains 100km/h (62mph); passenger trains up to 200 km/h (125mph)
- Maximum speed: freight trains 160km/h (100mph); passenger trains 250 km/h (155mph)
- Reduction in journey time from Zurich to Lugano after completion of the axis (from 2020): around 45 minutes
- Official opening of the Gotthard Base Tunnel: 11 December 2016
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