Carmel Tunnels
Route 23 | |
---|---|
כביש 23 / מנהרות הכרמל Minharot HaCarmel / Kvish Esrim ve'Shalosh | |
Route information | |
Length: | 8.6 km (5.3 mi) |
Existed: | December, 2010 – present |
Major junctions | |
West end: | Haifa Darom Interchange |
Ruppin Interchange | |
East end: | Yadin/Mevo Carmel Interchange |
Location | |
Major cities: |
Haifa Neighborhoods: Hof HaCarmel, Neve Sha'anan, Check Post, Haifa Port East |
Highway system | |
Highways |
The Carmel Tunnels (Hebrew: מנהרות הכרמל, Minharot HaCarmel; also known as Route 23) are a set of road tunnels in Haifa, Israel. The tunnels' purpose is to reduce road congestion in the Haifa area and to provide an alternate route of reaching the eastern and central parts of the city, Haifa Bay and the Krayot area to and from Israel's central coastal plain without having to travel through traffic-congested downtown Haifa, having to drive up and across Mount Carmel or bypassing Haifa from the east, along the edge of the Jezreel Valley (via Highway 70 for example). The tunnels cut the travel time from the Haifa South interchange in the west to the Checkpost interchange in the east from 30–50 minutes down to 6 minutes.
The tunnels were built and are operated as a BOT project, and driving in the tunnels requires paying a toll. They were opened to traffic on 1 December 2010.[1]
Overview
The entire project is 8.6 km long. There are four tunnels (two sets of twin tunnels), the 3.5 km long western set and the 1.6 km long eastern set, containing two lanes of traffic in each tunnel. The tunnels were bored in Mount Carmel, essentially under the city of Haifa and have three portals: one from the west, near the MATAM business park (with a connection to the Coastal Highway and the Old Haifa–Tel Aviv Highway), one in the center off Rupin Road (next to the Grand Canyon Shopping Mall), and from the east connecting to the Krayot (aka the "Checkpost") interchange and Highway 22 at the Yadin/Mevo Carmel interchange.
The project was built by Carmelton, a subsidiary of Ashtrom and Shikun UVinui, two of the largest infrastructure companies in Israel, and the tunnels were bored by China Civil Engineering Construction Corporation (CCECC), a Chinese company specializing in tunnel boring.
In January 2009, boring was completed on the westbound tunnel in the eastern portion of the project.[2] Boring of the last tunnel was completed on June 1, 2009.[3] The cost for drivers is 6 NIS for each segment (a drive to the central portal is considered one segment and driving the entire east-west route is composed of two segments).[4] Payment can be made in cash at a toll booth or by video tolling using automatic number plate recognition for subscribers who arrange a billing relationship or by video or transponder tolling for Highway 6 subscribers. The total cost of the project will be approximately 1.2 billion NIS (300 million US Dollars in December 2008 prices).
In early March 2014 construction was completed on a connector between the tunnels' eastern portal and Highway 22. This connector is the final link between a series of controlled-access highways that together form an inter-city highway corridor stretching along most of Israel's Mediterranean coast, from Acre (Akko) in the north to Ashdod in the south. This corridor consists of whole or parts of highways 22, 23, 2, 20 and 4.
History
Plans for the tunnels were first proposed as early as 1992, and the winning tender for the construction of the tunnels was awarded to Carmelton in 1997. In 1999 Carmelton obtained financing for the project, however construction was delayed due to objections and other legal matters, at which point Israel Discount Bank backed out of its obligation to provide credit for the project. A lengthy legal suit followed, which eventually forced the bank to carry out its financial obligations.
Six hundred Chinese workers were brought in for the project by CCECC. The project was first delayed just one week after the cornerstone was laid in April 2007, following concerns over electromagnetic radiation standards.[5] Work finally resumed on June 19, 2007.
The project was once again delayed in September 2008, when CCECC demanded that the contract with Carmelton be re-negotiated due to the increase in costs which CCECC had to deal with, mainly due to a rise in construction materials costs. Construction work was disrupted for over a month, first slowing down and eventually stopping completely. Work was resumed on October 23, 2008.[6]
Despite these delays, Carmelton managed to open the tunnels on December 1, 2010, six months ahead of schedule.[7]
Junctions
km | Name | Type | Meaning | Location | Road(s) Crossed |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 | מחלף חיפה דרום (Haifa Darom Interchange) |
|
Haifa South | Haifa, Hof HaCarmel, Carmel Beach Central Bus Station, Carmel Beach Railway Station |
Highway 2, Highway 4 |
0.8 | Haifa, Hof HaCarmel Carmel Beach Central Bus Station |
Megorshei Sfarad St. | |||
0.9 | Toll Plaza | Haifa, Hof HaCarmel | |||
1 | Shambur, Romema neighborhoods |
||||
4.2 | מחלף רופין (Ruppin Interchange) |
|
named after Arthur Ruppin |
Grand Canyon Shopping Mall Neve Sha'anan neighborhood |
Simcha Golan Road, Ruppin Road |
4.7 | Neve Sha'anan neighborhood | ||||
6.7 | Toll Plaza | Haifa, Check Post | |||
7.3 | מחלף הקריות (HaKrayot Interchange) |
|
named after northern suburbs the towns |
Haifa, Check Post | Highway 4, Inbar Street, HaNapah Street |
8.6 | מחלף ידין (Yadin/Mevo Carmel Interchange) |
Named after Yigael Yadin |
Haifa Port East |
Yigael Yadin Road, Highway 22 |
References
- ↑ Ron Freidman, There's light at the end of the Carmel Tunnels, The Jerusalem Post, December 1, 2010
- ↑ Ra'avad, Ahiya (January 19, 2009). "הסתיימה חפירת מנהרת הכרמל הראשונה" [Boring of the First Carmel Tunnel Completed] (in Hebrew). Ynet. Retrieved 2009-01-20.
- ↑ Ra'avad, Ahiya (June 1, 2009). "הסתיימה כריית מנהרות הכרמל, הפתיחה באפריל" [Boring of the Carmel Tunnels Completed, opening in April] (in Hebrew). Ynet. Retrieved 2009-01-02.
- ↑ "ההמתנה לעודף תגרום לפקקים במנהרות הכרמל?" [Waiting for change will cause traffic jams in Carmel Tunnels?] (in Hebrew). Ynet. September 14, 2010. Retrieved 2010-09-18.
- ↑ Avi Bar-Eli. "Electric Co. and Environment Ministry at loggerheads / Projects delayed in fight over radiation standards". Haaretz (May 6, 2007).
- ↑ "הושגה פשרה - ממחר תתחדש העבודה במנהרות הכרמל" [Work on Carmel Tunnels will continue tomorrow"] (in Hebrew). Calcalist. October 22, 2008.
- ↑ Tunnel Boring Completed. Carmelton (July 29, 2009). (Hebrew) Archived August 2, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
External links
- Carmel Tunnels Website (Hebrew)
- Video journey on YouTube – Driving on the eastbound set of tunnels.
- Article from Zman Haifa (Hebrew)
- Carmel Tunnels Recognition System
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Coordinates: 32°47′24.06″N 35°0′18.52″E / 32.7900167°N 35.0051444°E