Gotthard Tunnel

Not to be confused with Gotthard Road Tunnel or Gotthard Base Tunnel.
Gotthard Tunnel

Inside the tunnel
Overview
Line Gotthard Railway
Location Switzerland
Coordinates 46°35′44″N 8°35′44″E / 46.59556°N 8.59556°E / 46.59556; 8.59556
Start Göschenen, Uri (north)
End Airolo, Ticino (south)
Operation
Work begun September 13, 1872 (1872-09-13)
Opened May 22, 1882 (1882-05-22)
Technical
Length 15.0 kilometres (9.3 mi)
Track gauge 1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) (standard gauge)
Highest elevation 1,151 m (3,776 ft)
(inside the tunnel)
Lowest elevation 1,106 m (3,629 ft)
(north portal)
Route map

The Gotthard Tunnel (German: Gotthardtunnel, Italian: Galleria del San Gottardo) is a 15.003 km (9.322 mi) long railway tunnel and forms the summit of the Gotthard Railway in Switzerland. It connects Göschenen with Airolo and was the first tunnel through the Gotthard massif. It is built as one double-track, standard gauge tunnel.[1]

The tunnel rises from the northern portal at Göschenen (1106 metres / 3650 ft) and the highest point (1151 metres, or 3800 ft) is reached after approximately 8 kilometres (5 mi). After two more kilometers, the border between the cantons of Uri and Ticino is passed; after another 5 kilometres (3 mi), the tunnel ends at the southern portal near to Airolo (1142 metres, or 3770 ft). The trip takes about seven to eight minutes by train. Services are operated by the Swiss Federal Railways.

Financing

In 1871 under the stewardship of the Swiss industrialist Alfred Escher, who created the Schweizerische Kreditanstalt in 1856, the Gotthard Railway Company was founded. Despite initial difficulties to finance the project, and resulting costs of about 11% over budget, the financing was shared among private and public investors from Switzerland (20M CHF), Italy (45M CHF) and the German Reich (20M CHF). The bidding war between an engineering company from Geneva and Italy was fought viciously, and finally, the Swiss engineer Louis Favre won the project with an estimated cost of 2830 CHF per meter. Because of his low bid, and the extra costs during construction, Favre increasingly found himself at odds with Swiss politicians and investors alike.[2]

Construction

The tunnel was built from 1871 to 1881 and marked the first large-scale use of dynamite, patented in 1867. Construction was surveyed by the Swiss engineer Louis Favre, who suffered a fatal heart attack inside the tunnel in 1879. Construction was difficult due to financial, technical and geological issues, the latter of which led to the death of around 200 workers (the exact number is not known) mainly due to water inrushes; many were also killed by the compressed air-driven trains carrying excavated material out of the tunnel. There were also serious health issues caused by an epidemic of hookworm infection (Ancylostoma duodenale).[3][4][5] Medical investigations led to "major advances in parasitology, by way of research into the aetiology, epidemiology and treatment of ancylostomiasis".[4] A strike of the workers in 1875 was crushed by the Swiss Army, killing four and wounding 13.

There is a memorial for the dead workers near the station building at Airolo, created by the artist Vincenzo Vela.

Workers in Airolo (1880)
Pneumatic locomotive with attached pressure container.[6]
Memorial for the dead workers

Operation

The tunnel was opened for traffic in 1882, operated by the private railway company Gotthardbahn, which ran from Lucerne to Chiasso at the Italian border. The Gotthardbahn was integrated into the Swiss Federal Railways in 1909. In 1920, the first electric trains were run through the Gotthard Tunnel. Initially the voltage had to be reduced from the desired 15 kilovolts to 7.5 kV, because the grime deposited on the insulators by the steam locomotives encouraged excessive arcing. However, in May the next year, steam was replaced entirely by electric traction, and the problem of soot and grime was eliminated.[7]

Until the opening of the Gotthard Road Tunnel, the Swiss Federal Railways offered piggyback services for cars and trucks through the Gotthard Tunnel. Today, that service exists as the rolling highway from the German to the Italian border and aims to reduce truck traffic on Swiss expressways. An improvisational piggyback service from Göschenen to Airolo was offered during the two-month closure of the Gotthard Road Tunnel in 2001.

Entry to the Gotthard Tunnel at Göschenen
Entry to the Gotthard Tunnel at Airolo

Neighbouring tunnels

The nearby Gotthard Road Tunnel was opened in 1980. A second railway tunnel, the Gotthard Base Tunnel, is currently under construction with completion now expected in 2016, having broken through in 2010.[8] The adjacent ramps include several turn tunnels (see Table of turn tunnels).

See also

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Gotthard rail tunnel.
  1. Eisenbahnatlas Schweiz. Verlag Schweers + Wall GmbH. 2012. p. 34. ISBN 978-3-89494-130-7.
  2. Tebart A (2013). Tunnelblick: 150 Jahre St. Gotthard Ingenieur.de (Technikgeschichte). Retrieved January 19, 2015.
  3. E. Bugnion, "On the epidemic caused by Ankylostomum among the eorkmen in the St. Gothard Tunnel", British Medical Journal, volume 1, page 382, 1881.
  4. 1 2 R. Peduzzi and J.-C. Piffaretti, "Ancylostoma duodenale and the Saint Gothard anaemia", British Medical Journal, volume 287, pages 1942–1945, 1983.
  5. Bibliography of Hookworm Disease
  6. Braun, Adolphe: Photographische Ansichten der Gotthardbahn, Dornach im Elsass, ca. 1875
  7. Book: "Die Bahn durch den Gotthard"
  8. BBC News - Swiss complete world's longest tunnel

External links

Coordinates: 46°35′44″N 8°35′44″E / 46.59556°N 8.59556°E / 46.59556; 8.59556

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 15, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.