Gotthard Base Tunnel
Overview | |
---|---|
Official name | Template:Lang-de Template:Lang-it Template:Lang-rm |
Line | Gotthard Line |
Location | Switzerland (Uri, Graubünden, and Ticino) |
Coordinates | 46°36′00″N 8°45′54″E / 46.600°N 8.765°E |
Status | Active since 11 December 2016[1] |
System | Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS) |
Crosses | Alps (western Glarus Alps and central Lepontine Alps at the eastern Gotthard Massif) |
Start | Erstfeld, canton of Uri (north, 460 m (1,510 ft)) |
End | Bodio, canton of Ticino (south, 312 m (1,024 ft)) |
Operation | |
Work begun | 4 November 1999[2] |
Opened | 1 June 2016[3] |
Owner | SBB Infrastructure |
Operator | SBB CFF FFS |
Traffic | Railway |
Character | Passenger and freight |
Technical | |
Length | 151.840 km (94.349 mi)[4] |
Line length | 57.09 km (35.47 mi)[4] |
Track length | 57.104 km (35.483 mi) (east tunnel) 57.017 km (35.429 mi) (west tunnel)[4] |
No. of tracks | 2 single-track tubes[4] |
Track gauge | 1,435 mm (4 ft 8+1⁄2 in) (standard gauge) |
Electrified | 15 kV 16.7 Hz |
Operating speed | Maximum speed: 250 km/h (160 mph) Operational speed: 200 km/h (124 mph) (Passenger);[5] 100 km/h (62 mph) (Freight) |
Highest elevation | 549 m (1,801 ft)[4] |
Lowest elevation | 312 m (1,024 ft) (south portal)[4] |
Tunnel clearance | 5.20 m (17.1 ft) from top of rail to overhead conductor[4] |
Grade | max 4.055 ‰ (north), max 6.76 ‰ (south)[4] |
Route map | |
The Gotthard Base Tunnel (GBT; Template:Lang-de, Template:Lang-it, Template:Lang-rm) is a railway tunnel through the Alps in Switzerland. It opened on 1 June 2016, and full service began on 11 December 2016.[6][7] With a route length of 57.09 km (35.5 mi),[4] it is the world's longest and deepest railway tunnel[8][9][10][note 1] and the first flat, low-level route through the Alps.[11] It lies at the heart of the Gotthard axis and constitutes the third tunnel connecting the cantons of Uri and Ticino, after the Gotthard Tunnel and the Gotthard Road Tunnel.
The link consists of two single-track tunnels connecting Erstfeld (Uri) with Bodio (Ticino) and passing below Sedrun (Graubünden). It is part of the New Railway Link through the Alps (NRLA) project, which also includes the Ceneri Base Tunnel further south (scheduled to open late 2020) and the Lötschberg Base Tunnel on the other main north-south axis. It is referred to as a "base tunnel" since it bypasses most of the existing Gotthard railway line, a winding mountain route opened in 1882 across the Saint-Gotthard Massif, which was operating at its capacity before the opening of the GBT. The new base tunnel establishes a direct route usable by high-speed rail and heavy freight trains.[12]
The main purpose of the Gotthard Base Tunnel is to increase local transport capacity through the Alpine barrier, especially for freight, notably on the Rotterdam–Basel–Genoa corridor, and more specifically to shift freight volumes from trucks to freight trains. This both significantly reduces the danger of fatal road crashes involving trucks, and reduces the environmental damage caused by heavy trucks. The tunnel provides a faster connection between the canton of Ticino and the rest of Switzerland, as well as between northern and southern Europe, cutting the Basel/Zürich–Lugano–Milan journey time for passenger trains by one hour (and from Lucerne to Bellinzona by 45 minutes).[13]
After 64 percent of Swiss voters accepted the NRLA project in a 1992 referendum, first preparatory and exploratory work began in 1996. The official start of construction began on 4 November 1999 at Amsteg.[14] Drilling operations in the eastern tunnel were completed on 15 October 2010 in a breakthrough ceremony broadcast live on Swiss TV,[15] and in the western tunnel on 23 March 2011. The tunnel's constructor, AlpTransit Gotthard AG, originally planned to hand over the tunnel to Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS) in operating condition in December 2016[16] but, on 4 February 2014, the handover date was changed to 5 June 2016 with the start of an 850-day opening countdown calendar on the AlpTransit homepage.[3] As of 1998, the total projected cost of the project was CHF 6.323 billion; as of December 2015, the final cost is projected as CHF 9.560 billion.[17] Nine people died during construction.[18]
Description
The Gotthard Base Tunnel, with a length of 57.09 kilometres (35.47 mi) and a total of 151.84 km (94.3 mi) of tunnels, shafts and passages, is the longest railway tunnel in the world,[note 2] with a geodetic distance of 55.782 kilometres (34.661 mi) between the two portals.[4][9] It is also the first flat route through the Alps or any other major mountain range, with a maximum height of 549 metres (1,801 ft) above sea level,[4] corresponding to that of Berne. It is the deepest railway tunnel in the world, with a maximum depth of 2,450 metres (8,040 ft),[4] comparable to that of the deepest mines on Earth. Without ventilation, the temperature inside the mountain reaches 46 °C (115 °F).[4]
Like the two other tunnels passing below the Gotthard, the Gotthard Base Tunnel connects two Alpine valleys across the Saint-Gotthard Massif: the Urner Reusstal in the canton of Uri, in which flows the river Reuss, and the Valle Leventina, the largest valley in the canton of Ticino, in which the river Ticino flows. Unlike most other tunnels, the Gotthard Base Tunnel passes under several distinct mountain massifs, two of them being major subranges of the Alps, the Glarus Alps and the Saint-Gotthard Massif, with the valley of the Anterior Rhine, the Surselva in the canton of Graubünden, between them. The tunnel passes under these two ranges more than 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) below the Chrüzlistock (2,709 m (8,888 ft)) and the Piz Vatgira (2,983 m (9,787 ft), near the Lukmanier Pass). While the cantons of Uri and Ticino are part of the German- and Italian-speaking areas of Switzerland respectively, the Surselva is mainly Romansh-speaking.
The Alps strongly influence the European climate – and that of Switzerland in particular – and there can be substantially different weather conditions at each end of the GBT, described by the Ticinese architect Mario Botta: "The light changes at the Gotthard: that of the Mediterranean Sea is not the same as that of the continent, that of the central lands, that of Europe far away from the sea."[19] On average, the temperature is 2 to 3 °C (4–5 °F) higher on the south side than the north side, but on some days, temperature differences are well over 10 °C (18 °F).[note 3]
The north portal lies in the north of the municipality of Erstfeld at an elevation of 460 metres (1,510 ft), east of the Reuss. There, the tunnel penetrates the western slopes of the Bälmeten and Chli Windgällen (although only marginally) before passing below the valley of the Chärstelenbach, a creek in the Maderanertal. From there, the tunnel runs parallel to the small valley of Etzli, below the Witenalpstock. The main crest of the Glarus Alps, which is the watershed between the Reuss and the Anterior Rhine, is crossed below the Chrüzlistock, the crest having an elevation of about 2,700 metres (8,900 ft) at this point. From the crest and border, the tunnel runs parallel to the small valley of the river Strem (Val Strem) before passing below Sedrun and the Anterior Rhine. From the bottom of the valley, the tunnel proceeds towards the valley of the Rein da Nalps (Val Nalps) and passes east of Lai da Nalps, before crossing the Gannaretsch range below the western summit of Piz Vatgira (2,981 metres (9,780 ft)). This is the deepest point of the tunnel, with a rock layer of 2,450 metres (8,040 ft) above it. The tunnel then passes below the valley of the Rein da Medel (Val Medel) and west of Lai da Sontga Maria. After a few kilometres the tunnel crosses the watershed between the Anterior Rhine and the Ticino, just north of Pizzo dell'Uomo (2,525 metres (8,284 ft)). This point corresponds to the main chain of the Alps, and is the main drainage divide between the Rhine and the Po. For a few kilometres, the tunnel passes below two western tributaries of the Brenno in the Valle Santa Maria before crossing the last range, west of the Passo Predèlp (about 2,500 metres (8,200 ft)) and east of Faido. It then follows the eastern slopes of the large Valle Leventina, the valley of the Ticino, for about 18 kilometres (11 mi) to the south portal at Bodio, at an elevation of 312 metres (1,024 ft), just 3 kilometres (1.9 mi) before Biasca, where the Brenno converges with the Ticino.[note 4]
The closest railway stations to the portals are Altdorf and Biasca. The first regularly served railway stations on the base line (as of 2016/17) are those of Arth-Goldau (Schwyz), a railway node with links to Lucerne and Zürich, and Bellinzona (the "Gate of Ticino"), with links to Locarno, Luino and Lugano (via the Monte Ceneri Rail Tunnel). The journey from Arth-Goldau to Bellinzona takes not more than an hour. The station of Altdorf is planned to be served by 2021. There also have been talks of using that of Biasca. The travel between Altdorf and Biasca would last less than 25 minutes.
History
Background
Since the 13th century, the 2,106 metre-high Gotthard Pass has been an important trade route from northern to southern Europe. Control of its access routes led to the birth of the Swiss Confederacy. The Gotthard Pass is located halfway between Lake Lucerne and Lake Maggiore. It is the shortest link between the navigable Rhine and the Po. The traverse of the pass took days.[20]
Quite late, compared to other pass routes through the Alps on a north-south axis (e.g. Simplon, San Bernardino, Brenner), namely in 1822, the first Saint-Gotthard Pass road was established after centuries-long usage of a bridle path. From 1842 onwards, a daily course by the Gotthard Post, a stagecoach drawn by five horses with ten seats, still took about 23 hours from Como to Flüelen.
In 1882, with the inauguration of the Gotthard Railway Tunnel, the travel time between Altdorf and Biasca was reduced dramatically to only hours, though often accompanied with overnight stays in huge Fin de siècle-hotels, for example in Biasca. In those days, it was still an adventure and it was only affordable to the very rich.
In the autumn of 1921, the final stagecoach traversed the pass.
Electrification of the railway line in 1922 significally reduced travel time even more. Refilling water boilers of steam locomotives was no longer necessary. There were also the technical advantages of electrical engines and future technical improvements.
It is said that the first car traversed the pass in 1895. The first reported surmounting of the pass in 1901 still took more than a day.
From 1924, car transport on trains through the railway tunnel began. The sections between Göschenen and Andermatt, the Schöllenen ravine, and especially the Tremola, had countless hairpin turns and serpentine curves from the peak of the pass to Airolo on the southern side of the pass, dropping 1,000 metres (3,300 ft) in altitude, posing a huge challenge for automobiles.
From 1953 onwards, the pass road was sequentially improved and expanded at several sections along the Gotthard route, finally ending in 1977 with the opening of an expressway fully circumventing the Tremola.
Transit time was further dramatically reduced with the opening of the Gotthard Road Tunnel and the finalization of the northern part of A2 motorway through the Urner Reusstal, with many additional tunnels (then leading from Basel to the Gotthard Road Tunnel), in 1980. With the completion in 1986 of the A2 motorway in the Valle Leventina, the huge valley leading from Airolo down to Bellinzona, and the surmounting of the Monte Ceneri between Bellinzona and Lugano in 1983, finally a continuous motorway was established from the northern border of Switzerland in Basel to the southern border in Chiasso, or the shortest motorway route from North-German Hamburg as far as South-Italian Sicilly, bringing down the competitiveness of the railway line.[21]
Today, both the rail and the road routes are among the most important passages through the Alps on the north-south axis.
After the opening of the auto tunnel, in 1980, traffic increased more than tenfold. The existing tunnel was at its capacity by 2013.[22] A second tunnel will be built next to the first, following a national referendum.[23][24] Construction is to start in 2020 and finish in 2027.
As early as 1947, engineer Eduard Gruner imagined a two-story base tunnel from Amsteg to Biasca, both rail and road, with a stop at Sedrun, to provide a faster and flatter passage through the Swiss Alps. Similarly to Gruner's idea, the GBT cuts through the Gotthard Massif some 600 m (2,000 ft) below the older tunnel. On the historic track the Gotthard Railway only trains up to 1,300 t (1,400 short tons; 1,300 long tons)[25] when using two locomotives or up to 1,500 t (1,700 short tons; 1,500 long tons) with an additional bank engine at the end of the train are able to pass through the narrow mountain valleys and through spiral tunnels climbing up to the portals of the old tunnel at a height of 1,151 m (3,776 ft) above sea level. Since the GBT is in full service, standard freight trains of up to 3,600 t (4,000 short tons; 3,500 long tons) are able to pass this natural barrier.
Because of ever-increasing international truck traffic, Swiss voters chose a shift in transportation policy in September 1992 by accepting the NRLA proposal. A second law, the Alpine Protection Act of February 1994,[26] requires a shift of as much tonnage as possible from truck transport to train transport.
The goal of both the laws is to transport trucks, trailers and freight containers through Switzerland, from Basel to Chiasso, and beyond by rail to relieve the overused roads, and that of the Gotthard in particular, by using intermodal freight transport and rolling highways (where the entire truck is transported). The GBT substantially contributes to the requirements of both laws and enables a direct flat route from the ports of the North Sea (notably Rotterdam) to those of the Mediterranean Sea (notably Genoa), via the Rhine corridor.
Passenger trains can travel up to 250 km/h (155 mph) through the GBT, currently reducing travel times for trans-Alpine train journeys by about 40 minutes, and by one hour once the adjacent Zimmerberg and Ceneri Base Tunnels are completed. This is viewed as a revolution, especially in the isolated region of Ticino, which is separated from the rest of the country by the Alps and the Gotthard. The two stations of Bellinzona and Lugano (respectively named "Gate of Ticino" and "Terrace of Ticino") were entirely renovated for the opening of the GBT, among other improvements.
As of 2016, the Gotthard Base Tunnel is the longest railway tunnel in the world. It is the third Swiss tunnel to bear this title, after the Gotthard Tunnel (15 km, 1882) and the Simplon Tunnel (19.8 km, 1905).[27] It is the third tunnel built under the Gotthard, after the Gotthard Tunnel and the Gotthard Road Tunnel.
Construction
Year | Month | Total excavated | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
(kilometres) | (miles) | Of planned (%) | ||
2004 | July | 52.34 | 32.52 | 34.1 |
2005 | June | 74.59 | 46.35 | 48.6 |
2006 | June | 94.10 | 58.47 | 61.3 |
2007 | June | 103.67 | 64.42 | 67.6 |
2008 | March | 108.02 | 67.12 | 70.4 |
April | 109.00 | 67.73 | 71.0 | |
July | 113.20 | 70.34 | 73.8 | |
August | 115.20 | 71.58 | 75.1 | |
October | 118.40 | 73.57 | 77.2 | |
2009 | January | 124.00 | 77.05 | 81.6 |
March | 127.30 | 79.10 | 83.9 | |
May | 131.00 | 81.40 | 86.3 | |
June | 133.00 | 82.64 | 87.6 | |
July | 134.80 | 83.76 | 87.9 | |
August | 136.60 | 84.88 | 90.0 | |
September | 137.30 | 85.31 | 90.4 | |
October | 138.60 | 86.12 | 91.3 | |
November | 140.00 | 86.99 | 92.2 | |
December | 141.38 | 87.85 | 93.0 | |
2010 | January | 141.82 | 88.12 | 93.4 |
February | 142.48 | 88.53 | 93.8 | |
March | 143.80 | 89.35 | 94.7 | |
April | 144.80 | 89.97 | 95.4 | |
May | 145.40 | 90.35 | 95.8 | |
June | 146.10 | 90.78 | 96.2 | |
July | 146.60 | 91.09 | 96.6 | |
August | 147.33 | 91.55 | 97.0 | |
September | 147.98 | 91.95 | 97.5 | |
October | 149.10 | 92.65 | 98.2 | |
November | 149.90 | 93.14 | 98.7 | |
December | 150.40 | 93.45 | 99.0 | |
2011 | January | 150.49 | 93.51 | 99.1 |
February | 150.77 | 93.68 | 99.3 | |
March | 151.26 | 93.99 | 99.6 | |
April | 151.70 | 94.26 | 99.91 | |
May | 151.75 | 94.29 | 99.94 | |
June | 151.82 | 94.34 | 99.99 | |
July | 151.82 | 94.34 | 100[30] |
AlpTransit Gotthard AG was responsible for construction. It is a wholly owned subsidiary of the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS).
To cut construction time in half, four access tunnels were built so that construction could start at four different sites simultaneously: Erstfeld, Amsteg, Sedrun, and Faido. A fifth at Bodio was added later. The two tunnels are joined approximately every 325 m (1,066 ft) by connecting galleries. Trains can move between the tunnels in the two multifunction stations at Sedrun and Faido. These stations house ventilation equipment and technical infrastructure and serve as emergency stops and evacuation routes.[12]
Access to the Sedrun station site is by a level access tunnel 1 km (0.6 mi) long from the valley floor near Sedrun. At the end of the access tunnel, two vertical shafts lead 800 m (2,625 ft) down to the base tunnel level. A proposal to construct a functioning railway station, called Porta Alpina (from Romansh, "Alpine Gate"), at this site was evaluated, but the project was put on hold in 2007 and definitively cancelled by the federal authorities in 2012 as uneconomical.[31]
The final breakthrough in the east tube occurred on 15 October 2010 at 14:17 +02:00.[32] The final breakthrough in the west tube occurred on 23 March 2011 at 12:20.[33][34]
On 30 August 2013, the tunnel was entirely traversed for the first time from Bodio to Erstfeld in six hours, by diesel train, buses and by foot.[35]
On 16 December 2013, the operational test phase started on a 13-kilometre (8.1 mi) stretch in the southern section of the west tube between Faido and Bodio. Its purpose was to test the infrastructure and any ancillary systems.[36]
On 31 October 2014, the railway track installation was completed. A gold sleeper on the very last part of the track was installed during the event to mark this milestone of progress.[37][38]
On 1 October 2015, following the permission by the Federal Office of Transport, the first tests on the entire length of the GBT were performed, with steadily increasing speed. On 8 November, a train reached the top speed of 275 km/h.[39]
Allocation of work
The contracts were awarded in sections:
- Erstfeld (the 7.7 km (4.8 mi) section from Erstfeld to Amsteg), with two tunnel boring machines (TBM) boring the two tubes. The break-through of the east tube between Erstfeld and Amsteg took place on 15 June 2009. The portal area was surface-mined.
- Amsteg (the 11.3 km (7.0 mi) section from Amsteg to north of Sedrun), ARGE AGN (Strabag and Züblin Murer) received the contract for work in this sector.[40] On 9 December 2009, the Amsteg section was officially delivered to the owner for fitting-out,[41] with civil engineering, construction, concrete and lining work completed in early 2010.[42]
- Sedrun (the 8.6 km (5.3 mi) East tube and 8.7 km (5.4 mi) West tube in the section immediately north and south of Sedrun), along with work performed by Transco (Bilfinger SE, Implenia, Frutiger and Impresa Pizzarotti).[43][44] The final breakthrough in the west tube occurred in March 2011.[45] The northbound tubes from Amsteg to the Sedrun multifunction station (north) were handed over to the railway systems contractor Transtec Gotthard on 15 September 2011, the date specified in the construction schedule.[46]
- Faido (13.4 km (8.3 mi) East tube and 13.6 km (8.5 mi) West tube in the section from south of Sedrun to Faido), with Consorzio TAT (Alpine Mayreder Bau, CSC Impresa costruzioni, Hochtief and Implenia and Impregilo).[47]
- Bodio (15.9 km (9.9 mi) East tube and 15.6 km (9.7 mi) West tube in the section from Faido to Bodio), with work performed by Consorzio TAT (Alpine Mayreder Bau, CSC Impresa costruzioni, Hochtief, Implenia and Impregilo).[47] Civil engineering construction, concrete and lining works were completed in early 2010.[42]
Deaths during construction
Nine workers lost their lives during construction; one in the Amsteg section, two in the Sedrun section, and three each in the southernmost Faido and Bodio sections.[18] They were:
Date | Nationality | Details |
---|---|---|
8 June 2000 | German | Hit by a boring bar that fell 700 metres (2,300 ft).[48] |
12 March 2002 | South African | Buried by excavation material.[49] |
3 April 2003 | German | Hit by a rock.[50] |
11 September 2003 | Austrian | Crushed by a toppling cable drum.[51][52] |
21 January 2005 | Italian (1) Swiss (1) |
Hit in a mine train collision.[53][54] |
23 November 2006 | German | Crushed by a mine train.[55] |
24 June 2010 | German | Catapulted from an inspection train.[56] |
16 July 2012 | Italian | Fell from a scaffold.[57] |
Inauguration and commissioning
In 2016, several events, including festivities and special exhibitions, were held around the Gotthard, culminating in the inaugurations in early June, dubbed Gottardo 2016. Public institutions joined the celebrations: Swiss Post issued a special stamp commemorating the Gotthard Base Tunnel,[58][59] and Swissmint issued gold and silver coins dedicated to the opening.
On 31 May 2016, a day before the inauguration, the nine people who died during construction were commemorated in a ceremony at the north portal in Erstfeld that was led by a Catholic vicar general, a vicar of the Evangelical-Reformed Church of Uri, a Jewish rabbi, and a Muslim imam. A bronze memorial plaque with their names — four coming from Germany, three from Italy, and one from each of South Africa and Austria – was unveiled by AlpTransit Gotthard AG CEO Renzo Simoni.[18] A Catholic shrine to Saint Barbara, the patron of miners, stands inside the tunnel as a memorial.[60]
The tunnel was officially inaugurated on 1 June 2016.[60] At the northern entrance in Erstfeld, President of the Confederation Johann Schneider-Ammann spoke of a "giant step for Switzerland but equally for our neighbours and the rest of the continent", while a live relay carried a speech given by Transport Minister Doris Leuthard at the southern entrance in Bodio. The first journey carried hundreds of Swiss citizens who had won tickets in a draw, while the assembled guests in Erstfeld, including the Federal Council in corpore, heads of state and government from neighbouring countries and transport ministers from European countries, attended the opening show Sacre del Gottardo by Volker Hesse featuring 600 dancers, acrobats, singers and musicians celebrating Alpine culture and myths around the Gotthard.[60] On the following weekend, popular festivities and special exhibitions, attended by more than 100,000 visitors, were held.
From 2 August to 27 November 2016, the Swiss Federal Railways ran a special train service through the tunnel called "Gottardino" which was open to the public. It was a once-daily service from Flüelen railway station to Biasca railway station and in reverse. The trains made a stop inside the tunnel, to allow passengers to visit an exhibition inside the underground multifunction station in Sedrun which would normally be used in emergency only.[61]
Regular services
During 2016, the GBT was tested extensively[62][63] before its integration into the regular schedule on 11 December.[64] On 5 December, the Swiss Federal Railways were granted permission from the Federal Transport Office to use the new base line. While the base tunnel is used for InterCity trains (ICN) and EuroCity trains (EC), the summit line remains in use for regional trains.[62] From 2019 onwards, the Gotthard axis will be served by the Stadler EC250 (Giruno), high-speed train and future flagship of the SBB fleet.
From the Amsteg portal, guided tours are organised inside the Gotthard Base Tunnel complex. A window allows visitors to watch the trains running in the tunnel.
Politics
The realization of the GBT, as the centrepiece of the NRLA, is also a prototypical example of direct democracy in Switzerland. In order to accomplish this mega-project the political institutions also had to overcome many parliamentary sessions and several major popular votes, including the following:[66]
- 27 September 1992, NRLA proposal (mandatory referendum): The final proposal by the Federal Council was accepted by 63.6% yes votes (declined by 1+2/2 cantons, turnout 45.9%)[67][68]
- 20 February 1994, Alps Initiative (federal popular initiative): Initiated by a few private people with the goal to protect the Alpine environment from the negative impact of traffic was accepted[69] by 51.9% yes votes (declined by 7 cantons, turnout 41%).[70][71] The initiative was accepted despite the recommendation by the Federal Council from 12 February 1992 to decline the initiative without any counterproposal,[71][72] and despite the parliamentary recommendation (both chambers) from 18 June 1993 to decline the initiative.[71][73]
- 29 November 1998, Public Transport Funding (mandatory referendum): A total budget of CHF 30 billion for several public transport projects was accepted by 63.5% yes votes (declined by 1+3/2 cantons, turnout 38.3%); "the NRLA is to receive CHF 13.6 billion"[74][75]
- 21 May 2000, Bilateral EU Agreements / 40-tonne Trucks / Heavy Traffic Fee (optional referendum): As part of a whole package of several bilateral agreements with the EU the Swiss also accepted by 67.2% yes votes (declined by 2 cantons, turnout 48.3%) the shift of an upper limit for trucks from 28 tonnes to 40 tonnes, but at the same time the EU agreed to a new heavy-traffic fee, which will also be used to finance the NRLA[76][77]
- 17 December 2003, Ceneri Base Tunnel (parliamentary session): The controversial funding of the Ceneri Base Tunnel was finally passed by parliamentary approval only; the possibility for an optional referendum was not raised by any political groups, nor by the public. The then-in-charge transport minister, Federal Councilor Moritz Leuenberger, was quoted as saying "This is the only way to make the railway [the Gotthard axis] a flat line between Basel and Chiasso."[78]
Figures
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- Diameter of each of the single-track tubes: 8.83–9.58 m (29.0–31.4 ft)[4]
- Distance between cross passage tube: ca. 325 m (1,066 ft)[4]
- Numbers of cross passage tubes: 178[4][5]
- Maximum overburden:2,450 m (8,040 ft) (at Piz Vatgira)[4]
- Start of construction: 1993 (sounding drills), 1996 (preparations), 4 November 1999 (official start, first blasting), 2003 (mechanical excavation)
- Breakthrough: 15 October 2010 (Eastern tube), 23 March 2011 (Western tube)[4]
- Commissioning: May 2016
- Inauguration/opening: 1 June 2016
- Start of daily passenger service: 11 December 2016 (see public transport timetable#Switzerland)[79]
- Total cost: CHF 9.560 billion[17] (as of December 2015[update])
- Travel time: Passenger trains – 20 minutes[5]
- Amount of excavated rock: 28,200,000 t (31,100,000 short tons; 27,800,000 long tons),[4][80] 13,300,000 m3 or 17,400,000 cu yd, the equivalent of 5 Giza pyramids
- Number of tunnel boring machines (TBM): Four Herrenknecht Gripper TBMs – Machine numbers S-210 and S-211 operated northbound from Bodio to Faido and Sedrun and were nicknamed Sissi and Heidi respectively; Machines S-229 and S-230 operated southbound from Erstfeld to Sedrun and were known as Gabi I and Gabi II.
- Total length: 440 m (1,440 ft) (including back-up equipment)
- Total weight: 3,000 t (3,300 short tons; 3,000 long tons)
- Power: 5 MW
- Max. excavation daily: 25–30 m (82–98 ft) (in excellent rock conditions)
- Total excavation length by TBM: about 45 km (28 mi) (for each tube)
- Manufacturer: Herrenknecht, Schwanau, Germany
Operation
Reduced travel times
Shortest journey time by train | Approx. time saved (minutes) | ||
---|---|---|---|
before | after | ||
Milan-Zurich | 4:03 | 3:26 | 35 |
Lugano-Zurich | 2:41 | 2:08 | 30 |
Safety
This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (October 2018) |
The safety requirements on the rolling stock will be similar to those of other long Swiss tunnels, including the ability for the emergency brake to be overridden.
Traffic
Projections
The number of projected trains per day were 180–260 freight trains and 50 (65 from 2020) passenger trains[5]
Passengers
After the opening of the tunnel there was an increase of passenger crossing the trans-alpine line, with 2.3 million passengers in the first 8 months, an increase of 30% over the previous year.[82]
As of August 2017, an average of 10,400 people cross the tunnel daily. Train services from Italy to Switzerland through the line are expected to become faster from 2020, with the opening of the Ceneri Base Tunnel, with an expected further increase in passenger numbers.[83] There are plans for a train service between Zurich and Milan with a journey time of 2:45 hours, down from 3:50 hours.[82]
Freight
67,000 tons on 120 trains crossed the tunnel each day during the first half year of operation.[84]
See also
- Rail transport in Switzerland
- High-speed rail in Switzerland
- List of tunnels in Switzerland
- List of tunnels in the Alps
- List of tunnels by location
- List of transport megaprojects
Notes
- ^ The world longest tunnel for transport of people is the Guangzhou Metro Line 3 in China (60 km). Reference: Template:Fr Nic Ulmi, "Des trous suisses remplis d'imaginaire" [interview with André Ourednik], Horizons, magazine of the Swiss National Science Foundation and the Swiss Academies of Arts and Sciences, number 118, September 2018, pages 22-23.
- ^ Excluding subway tunnels that lie near the surface. See also: List of longest subway tunnel sections and List of longest tunnels.
- ^ See the climate tables of Altdorf and Grono, two towns situated near each end of the tunnel. See also normals/climate-diagrams-and- normal-values-per-station.html?region=Map Climate diagrams and normal values per station (MeteoSwiss).
- ^ See Swisstopo topographic maps with catchment areas layer: map.geo.admin.ch.
References
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- ^ "Construction begins". Berne, Switzerland: Swiss Federal Archives SFA, Swiss Federal Office of Transport FOT, Swiss Confederation. 2016. Retrieved 4 July 2016.
- ^ a b "155 days until opening". Lucerne, Switzerland: AlpTransit Gotthard AG. Archived from the original on 21 March 2015. Retrieved 29 December 2015.
{{cite web}}
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{{cite web}}
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la luce del Mare Nostrum, è diversa rispetto alla luce del mondo interno, del mondo dell'altopiano, del mondo dell'Europa lontana dal mare Mediterraneo
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- ^ a b "St. Barbara Celebration 2012" (in German). Consorzio TAT. Archived from the original on 13 September 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2013.
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- ^ Gieri Venzin (30 May 2016). "Jacques Du Plooy, † 12. März 2002" (in German). SRF. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
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- ^ Template:Fr "Timbre-poste spécial avec de la pierre du Gothard", press release of the Swiss Post published on 11 May 2016 (page visited on 7 September 2016).
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Federal Councilor Moritz Leuenberger: «This is the only way to make the railway a flat line between Basel and Chiasso.»
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External links
- Official website
- Gotthard Tunnel Experience, Uri Tourism
- Gottardo 2016, official inauguration website
- SRF Gotthard – Die Eröffnung, official coverage and background information by SRF Swiss Radio and Television Template:De icon
- RTS Gothard – L'inauguration du tunnel, official coverage and background information by RTS Radio Télévision Suisse Template:Fr icon
- Alptransit Gotthard AG official website
- Gotthard Base Tunnel at Structurae
- AGN Erstfeld Amsteg Constructors Web Site (many photos and designs)
- Faido Bodio Constructors Web Site (many photos and designs)
- Videos
- Aerial views of the works (by AlpTransit AG): 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015
- Journey through the GBT (SRF DOK)
- Flight over the GBT (SRF DOK)
- 17 years of construction (NRLA)
- Corporate videos: AlpTransit Gotthard AG (main contractor), Herrenknecht (TBM), ABB (ventilation), Thales (railway signalling), Transtec Gotthard (railway technology)
- Railway tunnels in Switzerland
- Dual-tube railway tunnels
- High-speed railway lines in Switzerland
- Tunnels in the Alps
- Base tunnels
- Tunnels in the canton of Uri
- Graubünden–Uri border
- Tunnels in Graubünden
- Graubünden–Ticino border
- Tunnels in Ticino
- Ticino–Uri border
- Tunnels completed in 2016
- Gotthard railway
- 2016 establishments in Switzerland