Western Scheldt Tunnel

Western Scheldt Tunnel (Dutch: Westerscheldetunnel) is a 6.6-kilometre (4.1 mi) tunnel in the Netherlands that carries highway N62 under the Western Scheldt estuary between Ellewoutsdijk and Terneuzen. It is the longest tunnel for highway traffic in the Netherlands.

Western Scheldt Tunnel
Overview
Official nameWesterscheldetunnel
LocationZeeland, Netherlands
Coordinates51.3691°N 3.7989°E / 51.3691; 3.7989
RouteHighway N62
CrossesWestern Scheldt
StartEllewoutsdijk (north end)
EndTerneuzen (south end)
Operation
Opened14 March 2003 (2003-03-14)
OwnerProvince of Zeeland
TollYes, cars €5.00
Technical
Length6,600 metres (21,700 ft; 4.1 mi)
No. of lanes2 x 2
Lowest elevation−60 metres (−196 ft 10 in)
Tunnel clearance4.3 metres (14 ft 1 in)
Width2 x 11 metres (36 ft 1 in)
Grademax. 4.5%

History and description

The tunnel was built by a consortium of Franki Construct, Heijmans, Royal BAM Group, Philipp Holzmann, TBI Beton- en Waterbouw Voormolen and Wayss & Freytag[1] on behalf of NV Westerscheldetunnel (Western Scheldt Tunnel Company), which is 100% owned by the province of Zeeland. The tunnel was opened on 14 March 2003. Since then, the two automobile ferry lines Flushing-Breskens and Kruiningen-Perkpolder, operated by the Provincial Steamboat Service (Provinciale Stoombootdiensten), have been discontinued.

The Western Scheldt Tunnel is a bored tunnel and consists of two tubes which were excavated by a tunnel boring machine.[2] Each tube has two car lanes without a hard shoulder. Every 250 metres, the two tunnel tubes are connected by lateral connections. Normally the cross-connections are closed and locked. In an emergency, the doors unlock automatically. The traffic in the left driving lane of the other tunnel is stopped, allowing people to walk safely into the other tunnel.

The Western Scheldt Tunnel is 11.3 metres (37 ft) diameter, 6.6 kilometres (4.1 mi) long, with on the south end a 1,200 metres (3,900 ft) stretch of road with an uphill grade of 4.5%.[2] The maximum clearance is 4.30 metres (14.1 ft). The tunnel reaches its deepest point under the Pas van Terneuzen shipping lane, 60 metres (200 ft) below water level.

For both directions, the toll is collected near Borssele, near the north end of the tunnel.

Bus services

The tunnel is not accessible for pedestrians, cyclists or moped riders; however, there are bus services and on request (one hour in advance) bicycles and mopeds can be transported in the bus and a trailer, respectively. Public transport nodes are Tolplein (Borsele) on the north bank and Terneuzen Busstation on the south bank. Bus services through these nodes are provided by Connexxion:

Regular bus fares apply.

Tolls

  • Cars: €5.00
  • Motorcycles €2.50
  • Cars with caravan: €7.45
  • Small trucks, campers and buses: €18.20
  • Large trucks: €25.00

Emergency vehicles and military vehicles are toll-free.

Reduced tolls are available for subscribers (respectively €3.05, €4.55, €11.15 and €15.25). That is more expensive than the ferry over the Western Scheldt that operated before the tunnel was opened. As well, there is no reduced toll for residents of Zeelandic Flanders (Zeeuws-Vlaanderen).

Correct as of 12/04/2014

Lawsuit Committee Tunnel Toll Free

In April 2006, Zeelandic Flanders citizens in cooperation with the Socialist Party of Terneuzen established the Lawsuit Committee Tunnel Toll-Free (Actiecomité TunnelTolvrij.nl). The purpose of this lawsuit is first to oppose the sale of the tunnel and secondly to make the tunnel toll free.

gollark: ... sure?
gollark: Idea: automated emergency USB device ejection.
gollark: But it would be hard to emulate one by accident.
gollark: I mean, USB killers exist.
gollark: You can get ESPsomething microcontroller boards which have *builtin* WiFi and are generally more powerful.

References

  1. Structurae database
  2. Sterk, W; LePechon, JC; van Rees Vellinga, TP (2001). "Trimix Saturation with Excursions during the Western Scheldt deep tunneling project". Undersea and Hyperbaric Medicine Journal. Undersea and Hyperbaric Medical Society (Annual Scientific Meeting abstract). Retrieved 2009-03-16.
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