Thought some of you might find this interesting. Remember, all this occurs under what is essentially an open access rail system in Europe. What jumps out at me is the mention of having freight trains travelling at 100 mph. I wonder if that is a typo, e.g. perhaps the writer meant 100 kph.
Nov 21, 2004
New Tunnels Under the Alps Augur a Traffic Revolution for Europe - Albeit a Delayed One
By Bradley S. Klapper
Associated Press Writer
GENEVA (AP) - In a few years train passengers will vanish into a tunnel just south of Zurich and emerge 30 minutes later blinking in southern European sunshine. They’ll have missed the Alpine views but shortened their journey to Italy by half.
With mega-projects such as this one, the new, increasingly borderless Europe is knitting itself together by busting through ancient physical barriers - a tunnel from England to France, a Scandinavian bridge that makes it possible to drive from the Arctic Circle to the Mediterranean shore, and soon, running 36 miles under the Alps, the world’s longest rail tunnel.
Not as soon as hoped, though. The drilling is going slower than forecast, meaning the tunnel under the St. Gotthard massif to Milan will only open in 2015 or 2016 - five or six years late - and will cost some $2 billion more than the $10.7 billion Swiss voters were told when they approved the dig in a 1992 referendum.
A second, shorter tunnel, the 21-mile Loetschberg, is being dug to link Bern, the capital, to Milan in northern Italy. It’s on course for completion in 2007 as planned, the Transport Ministry says.
But for the Swiss, proud of their reputation for efficiently handling both time and money, the delay in drilling the Gotthard is a bit of an embarrassment.
“Geological difficulties are the main cause for the rising costs and delay,” said Davide Demichele, a Transport Ministry spokesman. "It is normal with tunnel projects that you cannot always tell exactly