A giant drilling machine punched its way through a final section of Alpine rock on Friday to complete the world’s longest tunnel, after 15 years of sometimes lethal construction work.
In a stage-managed breakthrough, attended by some 200 dignitaries, 30km inside the tunnel and broadcast live on Swiss television, engineers from both sides shook hands after the bore had pummeled through the final 1.5m of rock.
“Here, in the heart of the Swiss Alps, one of the biggest environmental projects on the continent has become reality,” Swiss Transport Minister Moritz Leuenberger said.
Tunnel workers paid tribute to their colleagues who had died on the construction site with a minute’s silence as the names of the eight victims were read out during an emotional ceremony for the breakthrough.
“Workers, thank you, thank you, thank you. We have not only built a tunnel, we have written history,” said Luzi Gruber of the construction company Implenia.
The 57km high-speed rail link, which will open in 2017, will form the lynchpin of a new rail network between northern and southeastern Europe and help ease congestion and pollution in the Swiss Alps.
It is the third tunnel to be built through the snowbound St Gotthard area, but it is the longest. It is also 3km longer than a rail link between two Japanese islands, the current record holder at 53.8km.
“The myth of the Gotthard has been broken for a third time. Our forefathers struggled from the Middle Ages onwards to make this mountain passable,” Peter Fueglistaler, director of the Federal Transport office, told journalists gathered for the final breakthrough.
Passengers will ultimately be able to speed from the Italian city of Milan to Zurich in less than three hours and further north into Germany, cutting the journey time by an hour.
Once completed, around 300 trains should be able to speed through the Gotthard’s twin tubes every day, at up to 250kph for passenger trains.
The US$9.8 billion tunnel, which is 9.5m in diameter, is also the fruit of strong popular environmental concern about pollution in the Swiss Alps.
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