Swiss open world's longest land tunnel

This version of Wbna19248748 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

With a ceremony that went off like a classic Swiss timepiece, officials Friday inaugurated the world's longest overland tunnel, a 21-mile-long rail link under the Alps meant to ease highway traffic jams in the mountainous country.
SWITZERLAND ALPINE TUNNEL
The first train passing the the tunnel arrives on the south side during inauguration day of the Loetschberg railway Tunnel in Raron, Switzerland. Olivier Maire / AP

With a ceremony that went off like a classic Swiss timepiece, officials Friday inaugurated the world’s longest overland tunnel, a 21-mile-long rail link under the Alps meant to ease highway traffic jams in the mountainous country.

The tunnel, which took eight years to build and cost $3.5 billion — will trim the time trains need to cross between Germany and Italy from 3½ hours to just under two.

The first train through the tunnel was a freight carrying Swiss Transport Minister Moritz Leuenberger, arriving in the town of Frutigen at the tunnel’s north entrance. It burst through a banner declaring “Loetschberg — Connecting Europe” to the cheers of more than 1,000 people and the popping of fireworks.

A priest and a minister blessed the tracks and several bands played. At one point, the festivities moved along so briskly that officials had to slow them down for the punctually arriving train.

After the inaugural journey, a second train carried journalists and other passengers southward — a smooth and quiet ride on rubber-cushioned rails that are suitable for high-speed trains from Germany, France and Italy. Freight trains will be able to travel at speeds up to 100 mph and passenger trains at up to 150 mph.

Midway through the tunnel, the train stopped so that officials could show off the emergency and maintenance area, and they served white wine, Swiss cheese and dried beef called buendnerfleisch. Cell phone reception was strong throughout the ride, even at points where the tunnel was 6,500 feet below the mountain surface.

When it arrived on the other side, travelers were greeted by the Valaisian Alps — some still snowcapped — and hundreds of children in the city of Visp waving Swiss flags and cheering “Bravo.”

Record doubled
Loetschberg is the longest land tunnel, surpassing Japan’s 16.4 mile Hakkoda Tunnel. But it is shorter than the 33½-mile undersea Seikan Tunnel, also in Japan, and the 31-mile Channel Tunnel connecting France and England.

The Loetschberg was dug parallel to an even more ambitious project — the 36-mile Gotthard Tunnel, which will be the world’s longest when it is completed in 2017.

The Loetschberg tunnel will get skiers to Swiss resorts more quickly. The trip from Bern, at the northern end of the tunnel, to Visp, near ski regions like Switzerland’s Zermatt and Italy’s Courmayeur on the southern side of the Alps, will be cut in half — from 110 minutes to 55 minutes.

SWITZERLAND ALPINE TUNNEL
A locomotive of the RE 485 type pushes a freight train out of the tunnel, during the inauguration of the Loetschberg railway Tunnel in Frutigen, Switzerland, Friday, June 15, 2007. The 34.6 kilometers long transalpine base tunnel between Frutigen and Raron is the longest railway tunnel in Switzerland and the third longest in the world.Peter Klaunzer / KEYSTONE

By running at low elevation, the tunnel will be able to accommodate trains and cargo loads that cannot negotiate the long climb and switchbacks to existing tunnels higher up the mountain.

As villagers in Frutigen watched the inaugural ceremony, the steady stream of freight and passenger trains on the old track on the hill above the tunnel underscored the importance the connection will serve to traffic between Italy and Germany.

For Swiss taxpayers — who are paying for the twin, multibillion-dollar construction projects — the main selling-point is that it will move heavy trucks off their crowded highways and onto trains.

Switzerland is at the center of a north-south European axis where traffic has increased more than tenfold since 1980. The Swiss have tired of traffic jams caused by big rigs and vacationers filling their narrow valleys.

Passenger trains will start traveling through the tunnel on Dec. 9. From then on, 72 freight trains and 43 passenger trains will pass through the tunnel every day.

Due to cost constraints, only the eastern tube of the Loetschberg has so far been completed. It remains open whether the parallel western tube will be finished as well, but until that might happen, trains will alternate traveling in opposite directions on the finished side.

×
AdBlock Detected!
Please disable it to support our content.

Related Articles

Donald Trump Presidency Updates - Politics and Government | NBC News Clone | Inflation Rates 2025 Analysis - Business and Economy | NBC News Clone | Latest Vaccine Developments - Health and Medicine | NBC News Clone | Ukraine Russia Conflict Updates - World News | NBC News Clone | Openai Chatgpt News - Technology and Innovation | NBC News Clone | 2024 Paris Games Highlights - Sports and Recreation | NBC News Clone | Extreme Weather Events - Weather and Climate | NBC News Clone | Hollywood Updates - Entertainment and Celebrity | NBC News Clone | Government Transparency - Investigations and Analysis | NBC News Clone | Community Stories - Local News and Communities | NBC News Clone