In history 's watercolour of the Liverpool Edge Hill tunnel portals . This and a short section of the original tunnel nearer to Lime Street are the oldest rail tunnels in the world still in active use. Approach. The original two-track tunnel was removed to create a deep cutting. Some of the road bridges seen across the cutting are solid rock and in effect are a series of short tunnels. . On the right, hidden by undergrowth, is the disused original short 1829 Crown Street Tunnel. Summit Tunnel (#6) was in service from 1868 to 1993. and used to drill the first large tunnels through the
Alps The history of ancient tunnels and tunneling in the world is reviewed in various sources which include many examples of these structures that were built for different purposes. Some well known ancient and modern tunnels are briefly introduced below: • The
qanat or
kareez of
Persia are water management systems used to provide a reliable supply of water to human settlements or for irrigation in hot, arid and semi-arid climates. The deepest known qanat is in the Iranian city of
Gonabad, which after 2700 years, still provides drinking and agricultural water to nearly 40,000 people. Its main well depth is more than , and its length is . • The
Siloam Tunnel was built before 701 BC for a reliable supply of water, to withstand
siege attacks. • The
Eupalinian aqueduct on the island of
Samos (
North Aegean, Greece) was built in 520 BC by the ancient Greek engineer
Eupalinos of
Megara under a contract with the local community. Eupalinos organised the work so that the tunnel was begun from both sides of Mount Kastro. The two teams advanced simultaneously and met in the middle with excellent accuracy, something that was extremely difficult in that time. The aqueduct was of utmost defensive importance, since it ran underground, and it was not easily found by an enemy who could otherwise cut off the water supply to
Pythagoreion, the ancient capital of
Samos. The tunnel's existence was recorded by Herodotus (as was the mole and harbour, and the third wonder of the island, the great temple to Hera, thought by many to be the largest in the Greek world). The precise location of the tunnel was only re-established in the 19th century by German archaeologists. The tunnel proper is and visitors can still enter it. • One of the first known drainage and sewage networks in form of
tunnels was constructed at Persepolis in Iran at the same time as the construction of its foundation in 518 BC. In most places the network was dug in the sound rock of the mountain and then covered by large pieces of rock and stone followed by earth and piles of rubble to level the ground. During investigations and surveys, long sections of similar rock tunnels extending beneath the palace area were traced by Herzfeld and later by Schmidt and their archaeological teams. • The
Via Flaminia, an important
Roman road, penetrated the
Furlo pass in the
Apennines through a tunnel which emperor
Vespasian had ordered built in 76–77 AD. A modern road, the SS 3 Flaminia, still uses this tunnel, which had a precursor dating back to the 3rd century BC, remnants of this earlier tunnel (one of the first road tunnels) are also still visible. • The world's oldest tunnel traversing under a water body is claimed to be the
Terelek kaya tüneli under
Kızıl River, a little south of the towns of
Boyabat and
Durağan in
Turkey, just downstream from where
Kizil River joins its tributary
Gökırmak. The tunnel is presently under a narrow part of a lake formed by a dam some kilometres further downstream. Estimated to have been built more than 2,000 years ago, possibly by the same civilization that also built the royal tombs in a rock face nearby, it is assumed to have had a defensive purpose. •
Sapperton Canal Tunnel on the
Thames and Severn Canal in
England, dug through hills, which opened in 1789, was long and allowed
boat transport of
coal and other goods. Above it the
Sapperton Long Tunnel was constructed which carries the "Golden Valley" railway line between
Swindon and
Gloucester. • The 1791
Dudley canal tunnel is on the
Dudley Canal, in
Dudley,
England. The tunnel is long. Closed in 1962 the tunnel was reopened in 1973. The series of tunnels was extended in 1984 and 1989. •
Fritchley Tunnel, constructed in 1793 in Derbyshire by the
Butterley Company to transport limestone to its ironworks factory. The Butterley company engineered and built its own railway. A victim of the depression the company closed after 219 years in 2009. The tunnel is the world's oldest railway tunnel traversed by rail wagons. Gravity and horse haulage was utilised. The railway was converted to steam locomotion in 1813 using a
Steam Horse locomotive engineered and built by the Butterley company, however reverted to horses. Steam trains used the tunnel continuously from the 1840s when the railway was converted to a narrow gauge. The line closed in 1933. In the Second World War, the tunnel was used as an air raid shelter. Sealed up in 1977 it was rediscovered in 2013 and inspected. The tunnel was resealed to preserved the construction as it was designated an ancient monument. • The 1794
Butterley canal tunnel canal tunnel is in length on the
Cromford Canal in
Ripley, Derbyshire, England. The tunnel was built simultaneously with the 1793 Fritchley railway tunnel. The tunnel partially collapsed in 1900 splitting the Cromford Canal, and has not been used since. The Friends of Cromford Canal, a group of volunteers, are working at fully restoring the Cromford Canal and the Butterley Tunnel. • The 1796 Stoddart Tunnel in Chapel-en-le-Frith in
Derbyshire is reputed to be the oldest rail tunnel in the world. The rail wagons were originally horse-drawn. •
Derby Tunnels in
Salem, Massachusetts, were built in 1801 to smuggle imports affected by President
Thomas Jefferson's new customs duties. Jefferson had ordered local militias to help the Custom House in each port collect these dues, but the smugglers, led by Elias Derby, hired the Salem militia to dig the tunnels and hide the spoil. • A tunnel was created for the first true steam locomotive, from
Penydarren to
Abercynon. The Penydarren locomotive was built by
Richard Trevithick. The locomotive made the historic journey from Penydarren to Abercynon in 1804. Part of this tunnel can still be seen at
Pentrebach,
Merthyr Tydfil,
Wales. This is arguably the oldest railway tunnel in the world, dedicated only to self-propelled steam engines on rails. • The
Montgomery Bell Tunnel in Tennessee, an water diversion tunnel, , to power a water wheel, was built by slave labour in 1819, being the first full-scale tunnel in North America. • Bourne's Tunnel,
Rainhill, near
Liverpool, England. It is long. Built in the late 1820s, the exact date is unknown, however probably built in 1828 or 1829. This is the first tunnel in the world constructed under a railway line. The construction of the Liverpool to Manchester Railway ran over a horse-drawn tramway that ran from the Sutton collieries to the Liverpool-Warrington turnpike road. A tunnel was bored under the railway for the tramway. As the railway was being constructed the tunnel was made operational, opening prior to the Liverpool tunnels on the Liverpool to Manchester line. The tunnel was made redundant in 1844 when the tramway was dismantled. •
Crown Street station,
Liverpool, England, 1829. Built by
George Stephenson, a single-track railway tunnel, long, was bored from Edge Hill to Crown Street to serve the world's first intercity passenger railway terminus station. The station was abandoned in 1836 being too far from Liverpool city centre, with the area converted for freight use. Closed down in 1972, the tunnel is disused. However it is the oldest passenger rail tunnel running under streets in the world. • The 1829
Wapping Tunnel in Liverpool, England, at long on a twin track railway, was the first rail tunnel bored under a metropolis. The tunnel's path is from Edge Hill in the east of the city to
Wapping Dock in the south end Liverpool docks. The tunnel was used only for freight terminating at the
Park Lane goods terminal. Currently disused since 1972, the tunnel was to be a part of the
Merseyrail metro network, with work started and abandoned because of costs. The tunnel is in excellent condition and is still being considered for reuse by Merseyrail, maybe with an underground station cut into the tunnel for Liverpool university. The river portal is opposite the new
King's Dock Liverpool Arena being an ideal location for a serving station. If reused the tunnel will be the oldest used underground rail tunnel in the world and oldest section of any underground metro system. • 1832,
Lime Street railway station tunnel, Liverpool. A two track rail tunnel, long was bored under the metropolis from Edge Hill in the east of the city to Lime Street in Liverpool's city centre. The tunnel was in use from 1832 being used to transport building materials to the new Lime St station while under construction. The station and tunnel was opened to passengers in 1836. In the 1880s the tunnel was converted to a deep cutting, open to the atmosphere, being four tracks wide. This is the only occurrence of a major tunnel being removed. Two short sections of the original tunnel still exist at Edge Hill station and further towards Lime Street, giving the two tunnels the distinction of being the oldest rail tunnels in the world still in use, and the oldest in use under streets. Over time a section of the deep cutting has been converted back into tunnel due to sections having buildings built over. •
Box Tunnel in England, which opened in 1841, was the longest railway tunnel in the world at the time of construction. It was dug by hand, and has a length of . • The 1842 Prince of Wales Tunnel, in
Shildon near Darlington, England, is the oldest sizeable tunnel in the world still in use under a settlement. • The
Victoria Tunnel Newcastle opened in 1842, is a subterranean wagonway with a maximum depth of that drops from entrance to exit. The tunnel runs under Newcastle upon Tyne, England, and originally exited at the River Tyne. It remains largely intact. Originally designed to carry coal from
Spital Tongues to the river, in WW2 part of the tunnel was used as a shelter. Under the management of a charitable foundation called the Ouseburn Trust it is currently used for heritage tours. • The
Thames Tunnel, built by
Marc Isambard Brunel and his son
Isambard Kingdom Brunel opened in 1843, was the first tunnel (after Terelek) traversing under a water body, and the first to be built using a
tunnelling shield. Originally used as a foot-tunnel, the tunnel was converted to a railway tunnel in 1869 and was a part of the
East London Line of the
London Underground until 2007. It was the oldest section of the network, although not the oldest purpose built rail section. From 2010 the tunnel became a part of the
London Overground network. • The
Victoria Tunnel/
Waterloo Tunnel in
Liverpool, England, was bored under a metropolis opening in 1848. The tunnel was initially used only for rail freight serving the Waterloo Freight terminal, and later freight and passengers serving the
Liverpool ship liner terminal. The tunnel's path is from Edge Hill in the east of the city to the north end Liverpool docks at
Waterloo Dock. The tunnel is split into two tunnels with a short open air cutting linking the two. The cutting is where the cable hauled trains from Edge Hill were hitched and unhitched. The two tunnels are effectively one on the same centre line and are regarded as one. However, as initially the long Victoria section was originally cable hauled and the shorter Waterloo section was locomotive hauled, two separate names were given, the short section was named the
Waterloo Tunnel. In 1895 the two tunnels were converted to locomotive haulage. Used until 1972, the tunnel is still in excellent condition. A short section of the Victoria tunnel at Edge Hill is still used for shunting trains. The tunnel is being considered for reuse by the
Merseyrail network. Stations cut into the tunnel are being considered and also reuse by a monorail system from the proposed
Liverpool Waters redevelopment of Liverpool's Central Docks has been proposed. • The summit tunnel of the
Semmering railway, the first Alpine tunnel, was opened in 1848 and was long. It connected rail traffic between
Vienna, the capital of
Austro-Hungarian Empire, and
Trieste, its port. • The
Giovi Rail Tunnel through the
Appennini Mounts opened in 1854, linking the capital city of the
Kingdom of Sardinia,
Turin, to its port,
Genoa. The tunnel was long. • The oldest underground sections of the
London Underground were built using the cut-and-cover method in the 1860s, and opened in January 1863. What are now the
Metropolitan, Hammersmith & City and Circle lines were the first to prove the success of a
metro or subway system. • On 18 June 1868, the
Central Pacific Railroad's Summit Tunnel (Tunnel #6) at
Donner Pass in the California
Sierra Nevada mountains was opened, permitting the establishment of the commercial mass transportation of passengers and freight over the Sierras for the first time. It remained in daily use until 1993, when the
Southern Pacific Railroad closed it and transferred all rail traffic through the long Tunnel #41 (a.k.a. "The Big Hole") built a mile to the south in 1925. • In 1870, after fourteen years of works, the
Fréjus Rail Tunnel was completed between France and Italy, being the second-oldest Alpine tunnel, long. At that time it was the longest in the world. • The third Alpine tunnel, the
Gotthard Rail Tunnel, between northern and southern Switzerland, opened in 1882 and was the longest rail tunnel in the world, measuring . • The 1882
Col de Tende Road Tunnel, at long, was one of the first long road tunnels under a pass, running between France and Italy. • The
Mersey Railway tunnel opened in 1886, running from Liverpool to Birkenhead under the River Mersey. The
Mersey Railway was the world's first deep-level underground railway. By 1892 the extensions on land from Birkenhead Park station to Liverpool Central Low level station gave a tunnel in length. The under river section is in length, and was the longest underwater tunnel in world in January 1886. • The rail
Severn Tunnel was opened in late 1886, at long, although only of the tunnel is actually under the River Severn. The tunnel replaced the Mersey Railway tunnel's longest under water record, which was held for less than a year. •
James Greathead, in constructing the City & South London Railway tunnel beneath the Thames, opened in 1890, brought together three key elements of tunnel construction under water: • shield method of excavation; • permanent cast iron tunnel lining; • construction in a compressed air environment to inhibit water flowing through soft ground material into the tunnel heading. • In 1906 the fourth Alpine tunnel opened, the
Simplon Tunnel, between Switzerland and Italy. It is long, and was the longest tunnel in the world until 1982. It was also the deepest tunnel in the world, with a maximum rock overlay of approximately . • The 1927
Holland Tunnel was the first underwater tunnel designed for automobiles. The construction required a novel
ventilation system. • In 1945 the
Delaware Aqueduct tunnel was completed, supplying water to New York City. At it is the longest tunnel in the world. • In 1988 the long
Seikan Tunnel in Japan was completed under the
Tsugaru Strait, linking the islands of
Honshu and
Hokkaido. It was the longest railway tunnel in the world at that time. •
Ryfast is the longest undersea road tunnel. It is in length. The tunnel opened for use in 2020.
Longest • The
Thirlmere Aqueduct in
North West England, United Kingdom is sometimes considered the longest tunnel, of any type, in the world at , though the aqueduct's tunnel section is not continuous. • The
Dahuofang Water Tunnel in
China, opened in 2009, is the third longest water tunnel in the world at length. • The
Gotthard Base Tunnel in
Switzerland, opened in 2016, is the longest and deepest railway tunnel in the world at length and maximum depth below the
Gotthard Massif. It provides a
flat transit route between the North and South of Europe under the
Swiss Alps, at a maximum elevation of . • The
Seikan Tunnel in
Japan connects the main island of
Honshu with the northern island of
Hokkaido by rail. It is long, of which are crossing the
Tsugaru Strait undersea. • The
Channel Tunnel crosses the
English Channel between
France and the
United Kingdom. It has a total length of , of which are the world's longest undersea tunnel section. • The
Lötschberg Base Tunnel in
Switzerland was the longest land rail tunnel, with a length of , from its inauguration in 2007 until the completion of the
Gotthard Base Tunnel in 2016. • The
Lærdal Tunnel in Norway from
Lærdal to
Aurland is the world's longest road tunnel, intended for cars and similar vehicles, at . • The
Zhongnanshan Tunnel in
People's Republic of China opened in January 2007 is the world's second longest
highway tunnel and the longest mountain road tunnel in Asia, at . • The
Ryfast road network connecting
Stavanger and
Strand, Norway, includes the tunnel
Solbakktunnelen, which opened in 2015. This tunnel is long, making it both the world's longest underwater road tunnel and longest underwater highway tunnel. The tunnel has four driving lanes in total, and a speed limit of . • The longest canal tunnel is the
Rove Tunnel in France, over long.
Notable road vehicle tunnel in
Boston, U.S. in England, completed in 2010. Looking west towards the station in March 2005, showing the extent of construction three months before a small section collapsed. , Pennsylvania, U.S., in 2009 • The
Moffat Tunnel, opened in 1928, passes under the
Continental Divide of the Americas in
Colorado. The tunnel is long and at an elevation of is the highest active railroad tunnel in the U.S. (The inactive
Tennessee Pass Line and the historic
Alpine Tunnel are higher.) •
Williamson's tunnels in
Liverpool, from 1804 and completed around 1840 by a wealthy eccentric, are probably the largest underground
folly in the world. The tunnels were built with no functional purpose. • The
Chicago freight tunnel network is the largest urban street tunnel network, comprising of tunnels beneath the majority of downtown
Chicago streets. It operated between 1906 and 1956 as a freight network, connecting building basements and railway stations. Following a
1992 flood the network was sealed, although some parts still carry utility and communications infrastructure. • The
Pennsylvania Turnpike opened in 1940 with seven tunnels, most of which were bored as part of the stillborn
South Pennsylvania Railroad and giving the highway the nickname "Tunnel Highway". Four of the tunnels (
Allegheny Mountain,
Tuscarora Mountain,
Kittatinny Mountain, and
Blue Mountain) remain in active use, while the other three (
Laurel Hill,
Rays Hill, and
Sideling Hill) were bypassed in the 1960s; the latter two tunnels are on a bypassed section of the Turnpike now commonly known as the
Abandoned Pennsylvania Turnpike. • The
Fredhälls road tunnel was opened in 1966, in
Stockholm, Sweden, and the
New Elbe road tunnel opened in 1975 in
Hamburg, Germany. Both tunnels handle around 150,000 vehicles a day, making them two of the most trafficked tunnels in the world. • The
Honningsvåg Tunnel ( long) opened in 1999 on
European route E69 in Norway as the world's northernmost road tunnel, except for mines (which exist on
Svalbard). • The Central Artery road tunnel in
Boston, Massachusetts, is a part of the larger
Big Dig completed around 2007, and carries approximately 200,000 vehicles/day under the city along
Interstate 93,
US Route 1, and
Massachusetts Route 3, which share a
concurrency through the tunnels. The Big Dig replaced Boston's old badly deteriorated I-93 elevated highway. • The Stormwater Management And Road Tunnel or
SMART Tunnel, is a combined storm drainage and road structure opened in 2007 in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The tunnel is the longest stormwater
drainage tunnel in South East Asia and second longest in Asia. The facility can be operated as a simultaneous traffic and stormwater passage, or dedicated exclusively to stormwater when necessary. • The
Eiksund Tunnel on national road Rv 653 in Norway is the world's deepest subsea road tunnel, measuring long, with deepest point at below the sea level, opened in February 2008. •
Gerrards Cross railway tunnel, in England, opened in 2010, is notable in that it converted an existing railway cutting into a tunnel to create ground to build a supermarket over the tunnel. The railway in the cutting was first opened around 1906, stretching over 104 years to complete a railway tunnel. The tunnel was built using the cover method with craned in prefabricated forms in order to keep the busy railway operating. A branch of the
Tesco supermarket chain occupies the newly created ground above the railway tunnel, with an adjacent existing railway station at the end of the tunnel. During construction, a portion of the tunnel collapsed when soil cover was added. The prefabricated forms were covered with a layer of reinforced concrete after the collapse. • The
Fenghuoshan tunnel, completed in 2005 on the
Qinghai-Tibet railway is the world's highest railway tunnel, about above sea level and long. • The
La Linea Tunnel in
Colombia, 2016, is the longest, , mountain tunnel in South America. It crosses beneath a mountain at above sea level with six traffic lanes, and it has a parallel emergency tunnel. The tunnel is subject to serious
groundwater pressure. The tunnel will link
Bogotá and its urban area with the coffee-growing region, and with the main port on the Colombian Pacific coast. • The
Chicago Deep Tunnel Project is a network of of
drainage tunnels designed to reduce flooding in the
Chicago area. Started in the mid-1970s, the project is due to be completed in 2029. •
New York City Water Tunnel No. 3, started in 1970, has an expected completion beyond 2026, and will measure more than long. == Mining ==