Limehouse Link tunnel
Overview | |
---|---|
Location | London Docklands |
Coordinates | 51°30′40″N 0°01′59″W / 51.511°N 0.033°WCoordinates: 51°30′40″N 0°01′59″W / 51.511°N 0.033°W |
Status | Active |
Route | A1203 road |
Operation | |
Work begun | 1989 |
Opened | 1993 |
Operator | Transport for London |
Technical | |
Operating speed | 30mph |
The Limehouse Link tunnel is a 1.1 mile long tunnel in the Limehouse area of east London on the A1203 road which links the northern approach of Tower Bridge with a point just north of Canary Wharf in London Docklands. Built between 1989 and 1993 at a cost of £293 million it is currently (as of June 2011) the most expensive road scheme in Britain per mile,[1] working out at £50,500 per foot at 2011 prices.[1] It is the second largest non-estuarial road tunnel in the UK, after the Hindhead Tunnel in Surrey.
History
During the early 1980s, it was clear that the existing road infrastructure serving the Isle of Dogs development zone had no spare capacity, and the Limehouse Link formed the western part of improvements proposed by the London Docklands Development Corporation.[2] Planning started in 1986, the designers were the Sir Alexander Gibb & Partners.[3] The design of the tunnel approaches and portal buildings was carried out by Anthony Meats and Rooney O'Carroll Architects as part of an overall consultancy on the LDDC highway infrastructure programme.[4] Construction began in November 1989 and the tunnel project was officially opened in May 1993. At the time it was the second biggest engineering project in Europe after the Channel Tunnel.[1]
Construction
Balfour Beatty and Amec formed a joint venture to build the tunnel. Called 'Balfour Beatty Fairclough Joint Venture'[3] The project involved 5 million man hours over 193 weeks.[5]
Description
The tunnel is actually twin parallel tunnels built by the cut-and-cover method, with the tunnels under waterways built bottom-up behind temporary cofferdam walls.[2] The western portal of the tunnel is at the eastern end of The Highway (A1203), just east of its junction with Butcher Row. The Highway runs along the line of the Rotherhithe Tunnel for a short distance; the northern portal of that tunnel lies just north of the Link tunnel entrance. Heading east, the tunnel passes under the north side of Limehouse Basin, turns south-east to pass underneath Limekiln Dock and Dundee Wharf close to the embankment walls of the River Thames before turning north-east under Westferry Road. The eastern portal to the tunnel, emerging onto the A1261 Aspen Way, is just north of the Canary Wharf development, near West India Quay DLR station. Through the Blackwall area, the eastern extremity of Aspen Way includes a flyover crossing of a roundabout close to the line of the twin tunnels of the Blackwall Tunnel.
The tunnel has a 30mph speed limit, enforced by SpeedCurb speed cameras above the carriageway at the tunnel entrances, exits and inside the tunnel.
The Limehouse Link tunnel is notable for including slip roads to and from Westferry Road towards the eastern end of the twin tunnels. Complex ground conditions and the need to avoid several key existing structures including other tunnels and a river basin increased costs.
New Radio Public Address and Loudspeaker Public Address public safety systems were installed in early 2008.[6]
Art
The tunnel structures feature substantial works of public art. The western portal has Zadok Ben-David's circle of silhouettes, Restless Dream. The eastern portal has an untitled abstract by Nigel Hall. The eastern services building (Westferry Road) has artwork commissioned from leading UK artist and sculptor Michael Kenny (1941–1999), a relief work in Kilkenny limestone called On Strange And Distant Islands.
Incidents
Two vehicle fires have occurred in the tunnel: one in 2005[7] and another in 2014.
References
- 1 2 3 de Castella, Tom (27 June 2011). "The UK's last, great, expensive, short roads". BBC News.
- 1 2 "Bottom up in the basin" (PDF). Limehouse Link. LDDC. Retrieved 3 September 2012.
- 1 2 "Press Release 1992" (PDF). lddc-history.org.uk. Retrieved 29 October 2012.
- ↑ Cherry, Bridget (2005). London 5: East: The Buildings of England (Pevsner Architectural Guides) (Vol 5). London. p. 536. ISBN 978-0300107012.
- ↑ http://www.lddc-history.org.uk/other/limelink.pdf
- ↑ http://www.tfl.gov.uk/static/corporate/media/newscentre/archive/6895.html
- ↑ http://www.tfl.gov.uk/static/corporate/media/newscentre/archive/3829.html