Construction began in 1957, with
tunnelling shields, based on
Marc Isambard Brunel's design used for the
Thames Tunnel a century earlier, used to dig the two tunnels. Under each road deck is the pedestrian/cycle tunnel and ventilation ducts. 16
miners operated the shield working shifts in a
compressed air environment to ensure that the rock and the river above did not collapse into the tunneling area. The digging itself would be done only with great difficulty due to the
geology of the area, hard rock sitting under a soft
silt layer beneath the river. The techniques for decompression after a period of working in a high pressure atmosphere had not been perfected at this time and – also owing to the prevalence of workers refusing to go through the decompression sequence given the length of time required (around an hour) – there were a number of cases of
decompression sickness diagnosed as a result, resulting in two fatalities. Work on the tunnel was halted for a time after an explosion when compressed air escaped through the tunnel lining into the river, flushing outward in a fountain. The first completed tunnel tube, for northbound traffic, was eventually opened by
Elizabeth II on 3 July 1963, with the southbound tunnel opening in March 1964. The total cost of the project was
£10 million (). By this time, the migration of port facilities downstream to the deeper waters of the
Firth of Clyde and improvements in
engineering technology had allowed the consideration of bridges downstream of the city centre, namely the
Kingston Bridge and, much further downstream than the Tunnel, the
Erskine Bridge. ==The tunnels==