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Mont d'Ambin Base Tunnel

The Mont d'Ambin Base Tunnel, also known as the Mont Cenis Base Tunnel,[1] is the largest engineering work of the Lyon–Turin rail link project. Once completed, it will facilitate the principal high-speed rail link between Italy and France, conveying both high-speed passenger trains and rail freight between the two countries. At 57.5 kilometres (35.7 mi), that tunnel will be the longest rail tunnel in the world, ahead of the 57.1 km (35.5 mi) Gotthard Base Tunnel. It represents one third of the estimated overall cost of the project and is the only part of the line where work has started.

Mont d'Ambin Base Tunnel
Cross-section of the tunnel
Overview
StatusUnder construction
SystemTurin–Lyon high-speed railway
StartMaurienne, France
EndSusa Valley, Italy
Operation
Work begun2002
Constructed2019–present
Trafficpassenger trains and freight trains
CharacterTwin tube
Passenger and freight
Technical
Length57.5 km (35.7 mi)
No. of tracksDouble track
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
ElectrifiedElectrified
25 kV 50 Hz AC
Operating speed220 km/h (140 mph) (passenger)
100 km/h (62 mph) (freight)
Highest elevation580 metres (1,900 ft)
Tunnel clearance8.4 metres (28 ft)

Crossing the Alps between the Susa Valley in Piedmont and Maurienne in Savoie.[2] It has an estimated cost of 8 billion.[3] During September 2016, a key agreement towards the tunnel's construction was reached by France and Italy. Three years later, competitive tenders to perform packaged elements of the construction work were sought. As of late-2022, the expected completion date for the base tunnel was 2032.[4]

History edit

During 2002, reconnaissance work commenced on the French side.[5] Initially, access points were excavated at Modane; excavations commenced in Saint-Martin-de-la-Porte during 2003, and at La Praz two years later.[6][failed verification] During 2011, excavations in support of the survey work started on the Italian side at La Maddalena.[7] Between 2016 and 2017, while full-rate construction of the tunnel had not officially commenced, a 9 km (5.6 mi) reconnaissance gallery had been tunneled from Saint Martin de la Porte towards Italy; it was bored along the intended axis of the South tube of the tunnel and was driven at its final diameter.[8] It will comprise the first eight percent of the tunnel's final length.[9]

During September 2016, it was announced that France and Italy had reached a mutual agreement for the construction of the tunnel.[3] Furthermore, the tunnel has been approved and part-financed by the European Union, which has stated its intention to finance 40% of the tunnel construction costs, and has indicated its willingness to increase its contribution to 55%, as well as to help fund its French accesses if those go beyond mere adaptations of the existing infrastructure.[10][11] In January 2017, a treaty was ratified between the two countries, confirming the project's approval.[12]

During March 2019, the Italian government issued a formal request for proposals (RFP) for the construction of the French portion of the base tunnel; in July 2019, a second RFP was released for the Italian portion of the tunnel.[13][14] During July 2020, it was announced that a consortium headed by the French civil engineering firm Vinci Construction Grands Projets had been awarded a contract for the construction of several major elements of tunnel, including four Avrieux shafts of up to 500 m (1,640 ft 5 in) depth, and the conventional excavation of multiple galleries and seven caverns at the foot of the Villarodin Bourget–Modane decline.[15]

All four of the access tunnels, three in France and one in Italy, have been completed and work began in early 2019 on the artificial tunnel that will be the entrance to the base tunnel on the French side.

In September 2019, the first of eight tunnel boring machines (TBMs) to be used on the project finished excavation of the first 9 km (5.6 mi) of the southern tube of the base tunnel, reaching the La Praz access adit. The 11.25 m (36 ft 11 in) diameter hard rock single shield TBM started its journey in the summer of 2016 from the Saint-Martin-de-la-Porte access adit and managed to maintain an average speed of 15–20 m (49 ft 3 in – 65 ft 7 in)/day. This first €390 million lot of the base tunnel was constructed by a joint venture of Batignolles TPCI, Eiffage TP, Ghella, CMC, Cogeis and Sotrabas. Egis and Alpina provided project management[16]

Contracts for the Mount Cenis Base Tunnel were awarded in July 2021:

  • Lot 1 (€1.47 billion) for 22 km (13.7 mi) between Villarodin-Bourget/Modane and the Eastern (Italian) portal; expected to take 72 months
  • Lot 2 (€1.43 billion) for 23 km (14.3 mi) between Saint-Martin-de-la-Porte/La Praz and Modane; expected to take 65 months
  • Lot 3 (€228 million) for 3 km (1.9 mi) between Saint-Martin-de-la-Porte and the Western (French) Portal at Saint-Julien-Mont-Denis; the shortest, but with difficult geology requiring all blasting; expected to take 70 months

The approach routes are less advanced; planning is under way on the French side, but on the Italian side the proposed route has had fierce controversy, particularly in the Susa Valley the location of the Eastern portal, with a No TAV (no to high-speed rail) movement. The 2016 approval legislation could require extension of the tunnel by 5 km (3.1 mi) to reduce the impact on the local landscape.[17]

 
Profile of Mont d'Ambin Base Tunnel (sections excavated in blue, sections in progress in red)

Characteristics edit

 
Geothermal profile of new Turin-Lyon railway base tunnel

The Mont d'Ambin Base Tunnel is the principal engineering challenge of the in-development Turin–Lyon high-speed railway.[15] During 2019, it was stated that the tunnel's construction phase had been projected to take approximately ten years to complete.[18]

Opposition to the project is mostly organised under the loose banner of the No TAV movement.[19] As a result of protests against the original alignment of the tunnel in the Susa valley, it was decided to increase its length from 52 to 57.5 km (32.3 to 35.7 mi). Upon opening, the tunnel will be the longest rail tunnel in the world, followed by the Gotthard Base Tunnel (57.1 km (35.5 mi)), the Brenner Base Tunnel (55 km (34 mi), currently under construction), the Seikan Tunnel in Japan (53.85 km (33.46 mi)), the Channel Tunnel (50.45 km (31.35 mi)), and the Yulhyeon Tunnel in South Korea (50.3 km (31.3 mi)).

The tunnel portals will be in Saint-Jean-de-Maurienne on the French side and Susa on the Italian side. The geology adjacent to the French portal is heavily composed of fractured and sheared coal-bearing schists, as revealed by test drilling, which is poorly suited for using tunnel boring machines; thus, conventional drilling and blasting has to be used for the corresponding 5 km (3.1 mi) section.[20][21]

The cost of the joint Franco-Italian section (from Saint Jean de Maurienne to Val Susa) has been estimated at 8 billion euros (in January 2018 value).[3] This cost will be borne by the French and Italian governments, as well as drawing upon European Union (EU) funds.[22] The EU has agreed to provide 40% of the financing, but has indicated its willingness to increase its contribution to 55%, as well as to conditionally partially fund its French accesses.[10][11] However, a 2012 report by the French Court of Audit questioned the reliability of the estimated costs of the tunnel, as well the projected traffic volumes.[23]

The tunnel will be used by both freight trains and freight shuttles running at 100 km/h (62 mph), as well and by higher speed passenger trains operating at 220 km/h (140 mph); this design speed of slightly below the 250 km/h (160 mph) threshold used by the European Commission to define high-speed railways.[24] A stated aim of the project is a modal shift from road to rail for freight traffic over the Alps, as well as more passengers travelling by train rather than airliners, both of which achieve a reduction in CO2 emissions.[15]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Reina, Peter (16 June 2016). "After Earning World Record, Alpine Tunnels Move Ahead". Engineering News-Record. Retrieved 20 June 2016.
  2. ^ . LTF. Archived from the original on 31 October 2006. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  3. ^ a b c "The European Commission welcomes the agreement between France and Italy to move ahead with the Lyon-Turin project". Mobility and Transport - European Commission. 22 September 2016.
  4. ^ "TELT Lyon Turin • A new excavation front for the Lyon-Turin".
  5. ^ . LTF. Archived from the original on 22 February 2012. Retrieved 2 March 2012.
  6. ^ "Boring contract". Railway Gazette International. 1 March 2005.
  7. ^ (in French). Lyon Turin Ferroviaire. 10 April 2016. Archived from the original on 25 April 2016. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  8. ^ "Manuel Valls inaugure le tunnelier Federica au chantier du Lyon-Turin à Saint-Martin-La-Porte" (in French). LTF. Retrieved 1 August 2016.[permanent dead link]
  9. ^ "Telt annonce le percement de la section du tunnel de base entre Saint-Martin-la-Porte et La Praz" (in French). Retrieved 18 September 2019.
  10. ^ a b "L'Union européenne confirme une participation accrue sur le Lyon-Turin" (in French).
  11. ^ a b "Lyon-Turin : vers les 55 % de contribution européenne" (in French).
  12. ^ "L'accord franco-italien pour la ligne ferroviaire Lyon-Turin définitivement adopté". Le Monde.fr (in French). 26 January 2017 – via Le Monde.
  13. ^ "Ligne ferroviaire Lyon-Turin : malgré les tensions, Rome valide le lancement des appels d'offres" (in French). Le Monde. 11 March 2019. Retrieved 18 July 2019.
  14. ^ "Lyon-Turin : les avis de marché publiés pour le tronçon italien" (in French). Retrieved 18 July 2019.
  15. ^ a b c "Vinci consortium wins contract for preparatory work for Lyon–Turin rail line". worldconstructionnetwork.com. 13 July 2020.
  16. ^ "Lyon-Turin begins base line tender process". Tunneltalk. 19 March 2020.
  17. ^ Railway Gazette International, October 2021 (Volume 177 No 10), pp. 40–43
  18. ^ "Les travaux du Lyon-Turin débutent le 15 janvier". 18 December 2018.
  19. ^ Montalto Monella, Lillo (26 March 2019). "What is happening with the Lyon Turin high-speed line? Euronews traces the route to find out". Euronews. Retrieved 2 May 2019.
  20. ^ "Progressing the Lyon-Turin base rail link". www.tunneltalk.com.
  21. ^ "Covid-19 : retour à la normalité sur les chantiers du Lyon-Turin". TELT Lyon-Turin.
  22. ^ . Railway Gazette International. 11 January 2008. Archived from the original on 31 May 2012.
  23. ^ [1], . Archived from the original on 8 July 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  24. ^ "Decision No 661/2010/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 July 2010 on Union guidelines for the development of the trans-European transport network".

External links edit

  •   Media related to Mont d'Ambin Base Tunnel at Wikimedia Commons
  • Lyon-Turin rail link official site (in Italian, French, and English)

45°11′27″N 6°46′53″E / 45.190748°N 6.781311°E / 45.190748; 6.781311

mont, ambin, base, tunnel, also, known, mont, cenis, base, tunnel, largest, engineering, work, lyon, turin, rail, link, project, once, completed, will, facilitate, principal, high, speed, rail, link, between, italy, france, conveying, both, high, speed, passen. The Mont d Ambin Base Tunnel also known as the Mont Cenis Base Tunnel 1 is the largest engineering work of the Lyon Turin rail link project Once completed it will facilitate the principal high speed rail link between Italy and France conveying both high speed passenger trains and rail freight between the two countries At 57 5 kilometres 35 7 mi that tunnel will be the longest rail tunnel in the world ahead of the 57 1 km 35 5 mi Gotthard Base Tunnel It represents one third of the estimated overall cost of the project and is the only part of the line where work has started Mont d Ambin Base TunnelCross section of the tunnelOverviewStatusUnder constructionSystemTurin Lyon high speed railwayStartMaurienne FranceEndSusa Valley ItalyOperationWork begun2002Constructed2019 presentTrafficpassenger trains and freight trainsCharacterTwin tubePassenger and freightTechnicalLength57 5 km 35 7 mi No of tracksDouble trackTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrifiedElectrified25 kV 50 Hz ACOperating speed220 km h 140 mph passenger 100 km h 62 mph freight Highest elevation580 metres 1 900 ft Tunnel clearance8 4 metres 28 ft Crossing the Alps between the Susa Valley in Piedmont and Maurienne in Savoie 2 It has an estimated cost of 8 billion 3 During September 2016 a key agreement towards the tunnel s construction was reached by France and Italy Three years later competitive tenders to perform packaged elements of the construction work were sought As of late 2022 the expected completion date for the base tunnel was 2032 4 Contents 1 History 2 Characteristics 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory editDuring 2002 reconnaissance work commenced on the French side 5 Initially access points were excavated at Modane excavations commenced in Saint Martin de la Porte during 2003 and at La Praz two years later 6 failed verification During 2011 excavations in support of the survey work started on the Italian side at La Maddalena 7 Between 2016 and 2017 while full rate construction of the tunnel had not officially commenced a 9 km 5 6 mi reconnaissance gallery had been tunneled from Saint Martin de la Porte towards Italy it was bored along the intended axis of the South tube of the tunnel and was driven at its final diameter 8 It will comprise the first eight percent of the tunnel s final length 9 During September 2016 it was announced that France and Italy had reached a mutual agreement for the construction of the tunnel 3 Furthermore the tunnel has been approved and part financed by the European Union which has stated its intention to finance 40 of the tunnel construction costs and has indicated its willingness to increase its contribution to 55 as well as to help fund its French accesses if those go beyond mere adaptations of the existing infrastructure 10 11 In January 2017 a treaty was ratified between the two countries confirming the project s approval 12 During March 2019 the Italian government issued a formal request for proposals RFP for the construction of the French portion of the base tunnel in July 2019 a second RFP was released for the Italian portion of the tunnel 13 14 During July 2020 it was announced that a consortium headed by the French civil engineering firm Vinci Construction Grands Projets had been awarded a contract for the construction of several major elements of tunnel including four Avrieux shafts of up to 500 m 1 640 ft 5 in depth and the conventional excavation of multiple galleries and seven caverns at the foot of the Villarodin Bourget Modane decline 15 All four of the access tunnels three in France and one in Italy have been completed and work began in early 2019 on the artificial tunnel that will be the entrance to the base tunnel on the French side In September 2019 the first of eight tunnel boring machines TBMs to be used on the project finished excavation of the first 9 km 5 6 mi of the southern tube of the base tunnel reaching the La Praz access adit The 11 25 m 36 ft 11 in diameter hard rock single shield TBM started its journey in the summer of 2016 from the Saint Martin de la Porte access adit and managed to maintain an average speed of 15 20 m 49 ft 3 in 65 ft 7 in day This first 390 million lot of the base tunnel was constructed by a joint venture of Batignolles TPCI Eiffage TP Ghella CMC Cogeis and Sotrabas Egis and Alpina provided project management 16 Contracts for the Mount Cenis Base Tunnel were awarded in July 2021 Lot 1 1 47 billion for 22 km 13 7 mi between Villarodin Bourget Modane and the Eastern Italian portal expected to take 72 months Lot 2 1 43 billion for 23 km 14 3 mi between Saint Martin de la Porte La Praz and Modane expected to take 65 months Lot 3 228 million for 3 km 1 9 mi between Saint Martin de la Porte and the Western French Portal at Saint Julien Mont Denis the shortest but with difficult geology requiring all blasting expected to take 70 monthsThe approach routes are less advanced planning is under way on the French side but on the Italian side the proposed route has had fierce controversy particularly in the Susa Valley the location of the Eastern portal with a No TAV no to high speed rail movement The 2016 approval legislation could require extension of the tunnel by 5 km 3 1 mi to reduce the impact on the local landscape 17 nbsp Profile of Mont d Ambin Base Tunnel sections excavated in blue sections in progress in red Characteristics edit nbsp Geothermal profile of new Turin Lyon railway base tunnelThe Mont d Ambin Base Tunnel is the principal engineering challenge of the in development Turin Lyon high speed railway 15 During 2019 it was stated that the tunnel s construction phase had been projected to take approximately ten years to complete 18 Opposition to the project is mostly organised under the loose banner of the No TAV movement 19 As a result of protests against the original alignment of the tunnel in the Susa valley it was decided to increase its length from 52 to 57 5 km 32 3 to 35 7 mi Upon opening the tunnel will be the longest rail tunnel in the world followed by the Gotthard Base Tunnel 57 1 km 35 5 mi the Brenner Base Tunnel 55 km 34 mi currently under construction the Seikan Tunnel in Japan 53 85 km 33 46 mi the Channel Tunnel 50 45 km 31 35 mi and the Yulhyeon Tunnel in South Korea 50 3 km 31 3 mi The tunnel portals will be in Saint Jean de Maurienne on the French side and Susa on the Italian side The geology adjacent to the French portal is heavily composed of fractured and sheared coal bearing schists as revealed by test drilling which is poorly suited for using tunnel boring machines thus conventional drilling and blasting has to be used for the corresponding 5 km 3 1 mi section 20 21 The cost of the joint Franco Italian section from Saint Jean de Maurienne to Val Susa has been estimated at 8 billion euros in January 2018 value 3 This cost will be borne by the French and Italian governments as well as drawing upon European Union EU funds 22 The EU has agreed to provide 40 of the financing but has indicated its willingness to increase its contribution to 55 as well as to conditionally partially fund its French accesses 10 11 However a 2012 report by the French Court of Audit questioned the reliability of the estimated costs of the tunnel as well the projected traffic volumes 23 The tunnel will be used by both freight trains and freight shuttles running at 100 km h 62 mph as well and by higher speed passenger trains operating at 220 km h 140 mph this design speed of slightly below the 250 km h 160 mph threshold used by the European Commission to define high speed railways 24 A stated aim of the project is a modal shift from road to rail for freight traffic over the Alps as well as more passengers travelling by train rather than airliners both of which achieve a reduction in CO2 emissions 15 See also editLyon Turin Ferroviaire NRLA Turin Lyon high speed railway Lists of tunnelsReferences edit Reina Peter 16 June 2016 After Earning World Record Alpine Tunnels Move Ahead Engineering News Record Retrieved 20 June 2016 The Alpine tunnels LTF Archived from the original on 31 October 2006 Retrieved 2 March 2012 a b c The European Commission welcomes the agreement between France and Italy to move ahead with the Lyon Turin project Mobility and Transport European Commission 22 September 2016 TELT Lyon Turin A new excavation front for the Lyon Turin Close up on works LTF Archived from the original on 22 February 2012 Retrieved 2 March 2012 Boring contract Railway Gazette International 1 March 2005 Decouvrez la Maddalena in French Lyon Turin Ferroviaire 10 April 2016 Archived from the original on 25 April 2016 Retrieved 10 April 2016 Manuel Valls inaugure le tunnelier Federica au chantier du Lyon Turin a Saint Martin La Porte in French LTF Retrieved 1 August 2016 permanent dead link Telt annonce le percement de la section du tunnel de base entre Saint Martin la Porte et La Praz in French Retrieved 18 September 2019 a b L Union europeenne confirme une participation accrue sur le Lyon Turin in French a b Lyon Turin vers les 55 de contribution europeenne in French L accord franco italien pour la ligne ferroviaire Lyon Turin definitivement adopte Le Monde fr in French 26 January 2017 via Le Monde Ligne ferroviaire Lyon Turin malgre les tensions Rome valide le lancement des appels d offres in French Le Monde 11 March 2019 Retrieved 18 July 2019 Lyon Turin les avis de marche publies pour le troncon italien in French Retrieved 18 July 2019 a b c Vinci consortium wins contract for preparatory work for Lyon Turin rail line worldconstructionnetwork com 13 July 2020 Lyon Turin begins base line tender process Tunneltalk 19 March 2020 Railway Gazette International October 2021 Volume 177 No 10 pp 40 43 Les travaux du Lyon Turin debutent le 15 janvier 18 December 2018 Montalto Monella Lillo 26 March 2019 What is happening with the Lyon Turin high speed line Euronews traces the route to find out Euronews Retrieved 2 May 2019 Progressing the Lyon Turin base rail link www tunneltalk com Covid 19 retour a la normalite sur les chantiers du Lyon Turin TELT Lyon Turin Brenner base tunnel wins TEN T funding Railway Gazette International 11 January 2008 Archived from the original on 31 May 2012 1 Situation et perspectives des finances publiques 2012 Publications Publications Accueil Cour des comptes Archived from the original on 8 July 2012 Retrieved 22 August 2012 Decision No 661 2010 EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 7 July 2010 on Union guidelines for the development of the trans European transport network External links edit nbsp Media related to Mont d Ambin Base Tunnel at Wikimedia Commons Lyon Turin rail link official site in Italian French and English 45 11 27 N 6 46 53 E 45 190748 N 6 781311 E 45 190748 6 781311 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mont d 27Ambin Base Tunnel amp oldid 1190312459, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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