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Simplon Tunnel

The Simplon Tunnel (Simplontunnel, Traforo del Sempione or Galleria del Sempione) is a railway tunnel on the Simplon railway that connects Brig, Switzerland and Domodossola, Italy, through the Alps, providing a shortcut under the Simplon Pass route. It is straight except for short curves at either end.[1] It consists of two single-track tunnels built nearly 15 years apart. The first to be opened is 19,803 m (64,970 ft) long; the second is 19,824 m (65,039 ft) long, making it the longest railway tunnel in the world for most of the twentieth century, from 1906 until 1982, when the Daishimizu Tunnel opened.

Simplon Tunnel
Passing loop
Overview
Official nameGerman: Simplontunnel, Italian: Galleria del Sempione
LineSimplon line, (Lötschberg railway line)
LocationTraversing the Lepontine Alps between Switzerland and Italy
Coordinates46°19′26″N 8°00′25″E / 46.324°N 8.007°E / 46.324; 8.007 (Simplon Tunnel, northern portal)46°12′25″N 8°12′04″E / 46.207°N 8.201°E / 46.207; 8.201 (Simplon Tunnel, southern portal)
SystemSwiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS)
CrossesLepontine Alps (Wasenhorn massif)
StartBrig, canton of Valais, Switzerland 683 m (2,241 ft)
EndIselle di Trasquera, Piedmont, Italy 633 m (2,077 ft)
Operation
Work begun22 November 1898 (east tunnel), 1912 (west tunnel)
Opened19 May 1906 (east tunnel), 1921 (west tunnel)
OwnerSBB CFF FFS
OperatorSBB CFF FFS
TrafficRailway
CharacterPassenger, Freight, Car Transport
Vehicles per dayPassenger: 70, Freight: unknown
Technical
Length19.803 km (12.305 mi) (east tunnel), 19.823 km (12.317 mi) (west tunnel)
No. of tracksTwo single-track tubes
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8+12 in) standard gauge
Electrifiedsince 1 June 1906, 15 kV 16.7 Hz since 2 March 1930
Operating speed160 km/h (Passenger trains) 120 km/h (Car shuttles)
Highest elevation705 m (2,313 ft)
Lowest elevation633 m (2,077 ft) (south portal)
Grade2–7 
Route map
length
in m
Visp
(MGBSBB)
Brig
(MGBSBB)
19,803
Iselle tunnel
628
Iselle di Trasquera
Trasquera tunnel
1,712
2,966
Varzo
Varzo tunnel
81
Mognatta tunnel
422
Gabbio Mollo tunnel
568
San Giovanni tunnel
425
Rio Confinale tunnel
51
Rio Rido–Preglia tunnel
2,266
Preglia
Domodossola
Domodossola–Novara railway
to Novara
length
in m

Culminating at a height of only 705 m (2,313 ft) above sea level, the Simplon Tunnel was also the lowest direct Alpine crossing for 110 years, until the opening of the Gotthard Base Tunnel in 2016. The tunnel has a maximum rock overlay of approximately 2,150 m (7,050 ft),[2] also a world record at the time. Temperatures up to 56 °C (133 °F) have been measured inside the tunnel.[3]

Work on the first tube of the Simplon Tunnel commenced in 1898. The Italian king Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and the president of the Swiss Confederation (presiding the Federal Council of Switzerland for that year) Ludwig Forrer opened the tunnel at Brig on 19 May 1906.[4] The builders of the tunnel were Hermann Häustler and Hugo von Kager. Work on the second tube of the tunnel started in 1912 and it was opened in 1921.

History edit

 
Simplon Tunnel, 1906

Shortly after the opening of the first railway in Switzerland, each region began to favour a separate north–south link through the Alps towards Italy. Eastern Switzerland supported a line through the Splügen Pass or the Lukmanier Pass, Central Switzerland and Zürich favoured the Gotthard Pass and Western Switzerland supported the Simplon route.

In 1871 the first line was completed through the Alps, connecting Italy and France with the Fréjus Rail Tunnel.

The Compagnie de la Ligne d'Italie was founded in 1856 to build a connection between Romandy and Italy through the Canton of Valais and the Simplon. On 1 June 1874, it was taken over by the Simplon Company (French: Compagnie du Simplon, S), which was created to promote the project. This merged in 1881 with the company Western Swiss Railways (French: Chemins de Fer de la Suisse Occidentale, SO) to create the Western Switzerland–Simplon Company (French: Compagnie de la Suisse Occidentale et du Simplon, SOS). The French financiers of the SOS were able to secure finance for the tunnel in 1886. The company considered 31 proposals and selected one that involved the construction of a tunnel from Glis to Gondo, which would have been fully in Switzerland. From Gondo it would have continued on a ramp through the Divedro valley down to Domodossola.

At a Swiss-Italian conference held in July 1889, it was agreed, however, to build a nearly 20-kilometre long (12 mi) base tunnel through the territory of both states. In order to secure credit for the tunnel, the SOS joined with the Jura–Bern–Luzern Railway to create the Jura–Simplon Railway (French: Compagnie du Jura–Simplon, SOS).

The participation of the Swiss government led to the signing of a treaty with Italy on 25 November 1895 concerning the construction and operation of a railway through the Simplon from Brig to Domodossola by the Jura–Simplon Railway. The route of the tunnel was determined by military considerations so that the state border between the two countries was in the middle of the tunnel, allowing either country to block the tunnel in the event of war.

On 1 May 1903, the Jura-Simplon Railway was nationalized and integrated into the network of the Swiss Federal Railways (SBB), which completed the construction of the tunnel.

Construction edit

 
A monument in memory of the deceased workers of the Simplon Tunnel was erected next to the Iselle di Trasquera railway station on 29 May 1905.

The construction of the tunnel was carried out by the Hamburg engineering company Brandt & Brandau, of Karl Brandau and Alfred Brandt [de]. On average, 3,000 people a day worked on the site. They were mostly Italians, who suffered under very poor working conditions: 67 workers were killed in accidents; many died later of diseases. During the work, there were strikes, which led to the intervention of vigilantes and the Swiss army.

With up to 2,150 m (7,054 ft) of rock over the tunnel, temperatures of up to 42 °C (108 °F) were expected and a new building method was developed. In addition to the single-line main tunnel, a parallel tunnel was built, with the tunnel centres separated by 17 m (56 ft), through which pipes supplied fresh air to the builders in the main tunnel. It was envisaged that the parallel tunnel could be upgraded to a second running tunnel when required. The first Simplon Tunnel (19,803 m (64,970 ft) in length) was built almost straight, with only short curves at the two tunnel portals.

On 24 February 1905, the two halves of the tunnel came together. They were out of alignment by only 202 mm (8 in) horizontally and 87 mm (3.4 in) vertically. Construction time was 7+12 years, rather than 5+12 years, due to problems such as water inflows and strikes.

 
Art Nouveau Silver Medallion by Giannino Castiglioni for the Milan International Exhibition 1906. The South Portal of the Simplon Tunnel is on the obverse.

Electrification and operation edit

 
Old poster for the train between Paris and Milan (from 1908, two years after opening. Note the double-tracked depiction – in reality, a second single-track tunnel only opened in 1912).

Operations commenced through the tunnel on 19 May 1906. Because of its length among other things, it has operated with electric traction rather than steam from the beginning. The official decision to use electricity was made only half a year before its opening by the then-still-new SBB. Brown, Boveri & Cie (BBC) were commissioned to carry out the electrification. They decided in 1904 to use the three-phase system being introduced in Italy, with a three-phase power supply of 3,400 volts at 15.8 Hz[5] using two overhead wires with the track acting as the third conductor. BBC had no electric locomotives and initially acquired three locomotives built for the Ferrovia della Valtellina—the owner of the lines from Colico to Chiavenna and Tirano, which had been electrified with this system in 1901 and 1902[5]—from their owner, the Rete Adriatica (Adriatic Network) railway company. These three locomotives (which became FS Class E.360) hauled all traffic through the tunnel until 1908. On 2 March 1930, the Simplon tunnel was converted to 15 kV, 16.7 Hz AC (single-phase).

Expansion edit

Between 1912 and 1921, the 19,823-metre long (65,036 ft) second tube, known as Simplon II, was built. On 7 January 1922 the northern section from the north portal to the 500-metre long (1,640 ft) passing loop in the middle of the tunnel was brought into operation, followed on 16 October 1922 by the southern section from the passing loop to the south portal.

Second World War edit

During the Second World War, on both sides of the border, there were preparations for the possible detonation of the tunnels. The explosives attached to the tunnel on the Swiss section were not removed until 2001.[citation needed] In Italy, the German army planned, as part of its 1945 withdrawal, to blow up the tunnel, but was thwarted by Italian partisans with the help of two Swiss officials and Austrian deserters.

 
North portal
 
South portal
 
South portal at Iselle di Trasquera railway station. The picture was taken through a loophole of an old Italian World War II bunker. The bunker's weapons were directed to the tunnel's south portal.

Present and future edit

Car-carrying shuttle trains edit

 
A car transport train arriving in Iselle di Trasquera railway station

There is a car-carrying shuttle between Brig and Iselle di Trasquera, which provides a 20-minute train journey as an alternative to driving over the Simplon Pass. The service began on 1 December 1959. As roads over the Simplon Pass steadily improved throughout the 1970s and 1980s the tunnel's shuttle schedule was cut back, then ended altogether on 3 January 1993. Almost twelve years later, on 12 December 2004, the car shuttle service began again and now runs about every 90 minutes.

Piggyback transport edit

In the early 1990s, a project to implement the rolling highway system of piggyback operations for transalpine freight on the Lötschberg–Simplon axis was implemented. Such operations were possible under the previous profile of the Simplon Tunnel, but capacity would have been heavily restricted because its height was too low to carry trucks at the permitted maximum corner height of four metres (13 ft 1+12 in). The clearance in the tunnel was therefore increased by lowering the rail trackbed. This work began in 1995 and lasted eight years. At the same time, the tunnel vault was rehabilitated, while the drainage tunnel was rebuilt. A total of 200,000 m3 (260,000 cu yd) of rock was removed with pneumatic breakers.

In addition, a new railway electrification system was installed using overhead electric rail instead of the tensioned cable normally used for overhead electrification so that the required 4.90-metre (16 ft 78 in) height clearance could be achieved. In the late 1980s, a one kilometre (0.62 mi) long overhead electric rail had been tested at 160 km/h (99 mph). Before this experiment, trains running under overhead electric rails in Switzerland had been limited to 110 km/h (68 mph) and internationally to 80 km/h (50 mph).[6]

Restricted rail operations were maintained during the entire construction period.

Expansion of access routes edit

In order to expand the Lötschberg-Simplon axis into a powerful transit axis, various extensions to the access lines (from Bern and Lausanne in the north and from Novara and Milan in the south) have been made in recent years and decades. The largest projects have dealt with the northern access from Basel-Bern via Lötschberg. Between 1976 and 2007 there were three major transformations. First, the remaining single-track line between Spiez and Brig was dualled. Later, adjustments were made to the tunnel profile for piggyback traffic; in places only widening one track was possible. Finally, the Lötschberg Base Tunnel partially opened in 2007, although the new tunnel still has a 21-kilometre (13 mile) single-track section; this was done in order to save costs for the construction of the longer Gotthard Base Tunnel, which was completed in 2016.

Clearances were also raised for the piggyback traffic on the Italian side as well on the Simplon southern approach. Here, too, for financial reasons, at times only one line was cleared for the rolling highway. South of Domodossola, the single line to Novara via Lake Orta was electrified and modernized.

The classic approach to the Simplon from Paris and Lausanne—less important for today's transit traffic—was upgraded in the context of a nationwide rail upgrading project, Rail 2000, between 1985 and 2004. Further adjustments are proposed. In November 2004, the 7-kilometre long (4.3 mi) new line between Salgesch and Leuk in the Rhone Valley was completed to replace the last single-track bottleneck on the route. Under the ZEB ("Future rail development projects") package, the maximum speed on the long straight sections of the Rhone valley lines will be increased from 160 to 200 km/h (99 to 124 mph).

2011 fire edit

On 9 June 2011, a 300 m (984 ft) section of the Simplon II tunnel's roof was seriously damaged when a northbound BLS freight train caught fire and stopped 3 km (1.9 mi) into the tunnel. The temperature exceeded 800 °C (1,470 °F) and took more than two weeks to cool back to normal. By agreement all repairs to the tunnels are the responsibility of the SBB, which expected to reopen the tunnel in December 2011. The other tunnel remained in service.[7]

Repair work was completed in November 2011.[8]

Facts and figures edit

  • Length of tunnel I: 19,803 m (12.305 mi)
  • Length of tunnel II: 19,823 m (12.317 mi)
  • Elevation at north portal, Brig: 685.80 m (2,250.0 ft)
  • Elevation at crest of the tunnel: 704.98 m (2,312.9 ft)
  • Elevation at south portal, Iselle: 633.48 m (2,078.3 ft)
  • Gradient on north side: 2 ‰
  • Gradient on south side: 7 ‰ (1 in 143)[1]
  • Maximum rock overlay: 2,150 m (7,050 ft) (below the Tunnelspitz of the Wasenhorn massif)
  • Start of construction on north side: 22 November 1898
  • Start of construction of south side: 21 December 1898
  • Breakthrough: 24 February 1905
  • Inauguration: 19 May 1906
  • First electrical operation: 1 June 1906

Spiral tunnel edit

On the rail line north from Domodossola prior to the Simplon tunnels is the 2,968-metre (9,738 ft) "Varzo Spiral Tunnel", probably the longest spiral tunnel in the world. See the route diagram at the start of this subject.

In popular media edit

In the 1957 novel From Russia, with Love by Ian Fleming, protagonist James Bond fights his enemy, SMERSH agent Donovan Grant, eventually killing him, while passing through the Simplon Tunnel on the Orient Express.

In Against the Day by Thomas Pynchon, Reef Traverse works on the Simplon Tunnel.[9]

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "The Simplon Tunnel". The Capricornian. Rockhampton, Qld: National Library of Australia. 15 October 1904. p. 21. Retrieved 19 March 2013.
  2. ^ The highest point above the tunnel lies near the Tunnelspitz, at approximately 2,855 m (9,367 ft) above sea level (estimated from the Swisstopo topographic map [1]).
  3. ^ Andreas Henke, Tunnelling in Switzerland, pp. 2-3.
  4. ^ "Inaugurato il tunnel del Sempione" su accaddeoggi.it
  5. ^ a b Kalla-Bishop, P. M. (1971). Italian Railways. Newton Abbott, Devon, England: David & Charles. p. 98.
  6. ^ "Erfolgreiche Stromschienenversuche im Simplontunnel (Successful track trials in the Simplon tunnel)". Die Bundesbahn (in German). Darmstadt (3): 268. 1989. ISSN 0007-5876.
  7. ^ "Simplon badly damaged by fire". Modern Railways. Ian Allan. October 2011. p. 81.
  8. ^ "Switzerland: Cleanup and repair work in the Simplon Tunnel completed on time – UIC Communications". Archived from the original on 2013-04-16. Retrieved 2012-07-19.
  9. ^ Pynchon, Thomas (2006). Against the Day. New York, New York: The Penguin Group. pp. 652 et seq. ISBN 1-59420-120-X.

References edit

  • Michel Delaloye (Hrsg.): Simplon, histoire, géologie, minéralogie. Ed. Fondation Bernard et Suzanne Tissières, Martigny 2005. ISBN 2-9700343-2-8 (in German)
  • Frank Garbely: Bau des Simplontunnels. Die Streiks! Unia, Oberwallis 2006 (in German)
  • Thomas Köppel, Stefan Haas (Hrsg.): Simplon – 100 Jahre Simplontunnel. AS-Verlag, Zürich 2006. ISBN 3-909111-26-2
  • Wolfgang Mock: Simplon. Tisch 7 Verlagsgesellschaft, Köln 2005. ISBN 3-938476-09-5 (in German)
  • M. Rosenmund: Über die Anlage des Simplontunnels und dessen Absteckung, in: Jahresberichte der Geographisch-Ethnographischen Gesellschaft in Zürich, Band Band 5 (1904–1905), S. 71ff. (Digitalisat) (in German)
  • Hansrudolf Schwabe, Alex Amstein: 3 x 50 Jahre. Schweizer Eisenbahnen in Vergangenheit, Gegenwart und Zukunft. Pharos-Verlag, Basel 1997. ISBN 3-7230-0235-8 (in German)
  • Georges Tscherrig: 100 Jahre Simplontunnel. 2. Auflage. Rotten, Visp 2006. ISBN 3-907624-68-8 (in German)
  • Enzyklopädie des Eisenbahnwesens. Bd 9. Urban & Schwarzenberg, Berlin 1921 Directmedia Publishing, Berlin 2007 (Repr.), S. 68–72. ISBN 3-89853-562-2 (in German)

External links edit

  • Francis Fox, How the Swiss Built the Greatest Tunnel in the World, 1905
  • German language site: AlpenTunnel.de: Simplon-Tunnel
  • Winchester, Clarence, ed. (1936), "The Simplon Tunnel", Railway Wonders of the World, pp. 1428–1435 description of the construction of the tunnel
Records
Preceded by Longest tunnel
1906–1982
Succeeded by

46°19′25″N 8°00′11″E / 46.32361°N 8.00306°E / 46.32361; 8.00306

simplon, tunnel, simplontunnel, traforo, sempione, galleria, sempione, railway, tunnel, simplon, railway, that, connects, brig, switzerland, domodossola, italy, through, alps, providing, shortcut, under, simplon, pass, route, straight, except, short, curves, e. The Simplon Tunnel Simplontunnel Traforo del Sempione or Galleria del Sempione is a railway tunnel on the Simplon railway that connects Brig Switzerland and Domodossola Italy through the Alps providing a shortcut under the Simplon Pass route It is straight except for short curves at either end 1 It consists of two single track tunnels built nearly 15 years apart The first to be opened is 19 803 m 64 970 ft long the second is 19 824 m 65 039 ft long making it the longest railway tunnel in the world for most of the twentieth century from 1906 until 1982 when the Daishimizu Tunnel opened Simplon TunnelPassing loopOverviewOfficial nameGerman Simplontunnel Italian Galleria del SempioneLineSimplon line Lotschberg railway line LocationTraversing the Lepontine Alps between Switzerland and ItalyCoordinates46 19 26 N 8 00 25 E 46 324 N 8 007 E 46 324 8 007 Simplon Tunnel northern portal 46 12 25 N 8 12 04 E 46 207 N 8 201 E 46 207 8 201 Simplon Tunnel southern portal SystemSwiss Federal Railways SBB CFF FFS CrossesLepontine Alps Wasenhorn massif StartBrig canton of Valais Switzerland 683 m 2 241 ft EndIselle di Trasquera Piedmont Italy 633 m 2 077 ft OperationWork begun22 November 1898 east tunnel 1912 west tunnel Opened19 May 1906 east tunnel 1921 west tunnel OwnerSBB CFF FFSOperatorSBB CFF FFSTrafficRailwayCharacterPassenger Freight Car TransportVehicles per dayPassenger 70 Freight unknownTechnicalLength19 803 km 12 305 mi east tunnel 19 823 km 12 317 mi west tunnel No of tracksTwo single track tubesTrack gauge1 435 mm 4 ft 8 1 2 in standard gaugeElectrifiedsince 1 June 1906 15 kV 16 7 Hz since 2 March 1930Operating speed160 km h Passenger trains 120 km h Car shuttles Highest elevation705 m 2 313 ft Lowest elevation633 m 2 077 ft south portal Grade2 7 Route mapLegendlengthin mSimplon Railwayto LausanneLotschberg Lineto Bern via Lotschberg Base TunnelMatterhorn Gotthard Bahnto ZermattVisp MGB SBB Lotschberg Lineto Bern via Lotschberg TunnelBrig MGB SBB Matterhorn Gotthard Bahnto Andermatt amp GoschenenSimplon Tunnel 19 803SwitzerlandItaly borderIselle tunnel 628Iselle di TrasqueraTrasquera tunnel 1 712Varzo Spiral Tunnel 2 966VarzoVarzo tunnel 81Mognatta tunnel 422Gabbio Mollo tunnel 568San Giovanni tunnel 425Rio Confinale tunnel 51Rio Rido Preglia tunnel 2 266PregliaDomodossolaDomodossola Locarno railwayto LocarnoDomodossola Novara railwayto NovaraMilan Domodossola railwayto Milanlengthin mThis diagram viewtalkeditCulminating at a height of only 705 m 2 313 ft above sea level the Simplon Tunnel was also the lowest direct Alpine crossing for 110 years until the opening of the Gotthard Base Tunnel in 2016 The tunnel has a maximum rock overlay of approximately 2 150 m 7 050 ft 2 also a world record at the time Temperatures up to 56 C 133 F have been measured inside the tunnel 3 Work on the first tube of the Simplon Tunnel commenced in 1898 The Italian king Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and the president of the Swiss Confederation presiding the Federal Council of Switzerland for that year Ludwig Forrer opened the tunnel at Brig on 19 May 1906 4 The builders of the tunnel were Hermann Haustler and Hugo von Kager Work on the second tube of the tunnel started in 1912 and it was opened in 1921 Contents 1 History 1 1 Construction 1 2 Electrification and operation 1 3 Expansion 1 4 Second World War 2 Present and future 2 1 Car carrying shuttle trains 2 2 Piggyback transport 2 3 Expansion of access routes 2 4 2011 fire 3 Facts and figures 4 Spiral tunnel 5 In popular media 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksHistory edit nbsp Simplon Tunnel 1906Shortly after the opening of the first railway in Switzerland each region began to favour a separate north south link through the Alps towards Italy Eastern Switzerland supported a line through the Splugen Pass or the Lukmanier Pass Central Switzerland and Zurich favoured the Gotthard Pass and Western Switzerland supported the Simplon route In 1871 the first line was completed through the Alps connecting Italy and France with the Frejus Rail Tunnel The Compagnie de la Ligne d Italie was founded in 1856 to build a connection between Romandy and Italy through the Canton of Valais and the Simplon On 1 June 1874 it was taken over by the Simplon Company French Compagnie du Simplon S which was created to promote the project This merged in 1881 with the company Western Swiss Railways French Chemins de Fer de la Suisse Occidentale SO to create the Western Switzerland Simplon Company French Compagnie de la Suisse Occidentale et du Simplon SOS The French financiers of the SOS were able to secure finance for the tunnel in 1886 The company considered 31 proposals and selected one that involved the construction of a tunnel from Glis to Gondo which would have been fully in Switzerland From Gondo it would have continued on a ramp through the Divedro valley down to Domodossola At a Swiss Italian conference held in July 1889 it was agreed however to build a nearly 20 kilometre long 12 mi base tunnel through the territory of both states In order to secure credit for the tunnel the SOS joined with the Jura Bern Luzern Railway to create the Jura Simplon Railway French Compagnie du Jura Simplon SOS The participation of the Swiss government led to the signing of a treaty with Italy on 25 November 1895 concerning the construction and operation of a railway through the Simplon from Brig to Domodossola by the Jura Simplon Railway The route of the tunnel was determined by military considerations so that the state border between the two countries was in the middle of the tunnel allowing either country to block the tunnel in the event of war On 1 May 1903 the Jura Simplon Railway was nationalized and integrated into the network of the Swiss Federal Railways SBB which completed the construction of the tunnel Construction edit nbsp A monument in memory of the deceased workers of the Simplon Tunnel was erected next to the Iselle di Trasquera railway station on 29 May 1905 The construction of the tunnel was carried out by the Hamburg engineering company Brandt amp Brandau of Karl Brandau and Alfred Brandt de On average 3 000 people a day worked on the site They were mostly Italians who suffered under very poor working conditions 67 workers were killed in accidents many died later of diseases During the work there were strikes which led to the intervention of vigilantes and the Swiss army With up to 2 150 m 7 054 ft of rock over the tunnel temperatures of up to 42 C 108 F were expected and a new building method was developed In addition to the single line main tunnel a parallel tunnel was built with the tunnel centres separated by 17 m 56 ft through which pipes supplied fresh air to the builders in the main tunnel It was envisaged that the parallel tunnel could be upgraded to a second running tunnel when required The first Simplon Tunnel 19 803 m 64 970 ft in length was built almost straight with only short curves at the two tunnel portals On 24 February 1905 the two halves of the tunnel came together They were out of alignment by only 202 mm 8 in horizontally and 87 mm 3 4 in vertically Construction time was 7 1 2 years rather than 5 1 2 years due to problems such as water inflows and strikes nbsp Art Nouveau Silver Medallion by Giannino Castiglioni for the Milan International Exhibition 1906 The South Portal of the Simplon Tunnel is on the obverse Electrification and operation edit nbsp Old poster for the train between Paris and Milan from 1908 two years after opening Note the double tracked depiction in reality a second single track tunnel only opened in 1912 Operations commenced through the tunnel on 19 May 1906 Because of its length among other things it has operated with electric traction rather than steam from the beginning The official decision to use electricity was made only half a year before its opening by the then still new SBB Brown Boveri amp Cie BBC were commissioned to carry out the electrification They decided in 1904 to use the three phase system being introduced in Italy with a three phase power supply of 3 400 volts at 15 8 Hz 5 using two overhead wires with the track acting as the third conductor BBC had no electric locomotives and initially acquired three locomotives built for the Ferrovia della Valtellina the owner of the lines from Colico to Chiavenna and Tirano which had been electrified with this system in 1901 and 1902 5 from their owner the Rete Adriatica Adriatic Network railway company These three locomotives which became FS Class E 360 hauled all traffic through the tunnel until 1908 On 2 March 1930 the Simplon tunnel was converted to 15 kV 16 7 Hz AC single phase Expansion edit Between 1912 and 1921 the 19 823 metre long 65 036 ft second tube known as Simplon II was built On 7 January 1922 the northern section from the north portal to the 500 metre long 1 640 ft passing loop in the middle of the tunnel was brought into operation followed on 16 October 1922 by the southern section from the passing loop to the south portal Second World War edit During the Second World War on both sides of the border there were preparations for the possible detonation of the tunnels The explosives attached to the tunnel on the Swiss section were not removed until 2001 citation needed In Italy the German army planned as part of its 1945 withdrawal to blow up the tunnel but was thwarted by Italian partisans with the help of two Swiss officials and Austrian deserters nbsp North portal nbsp South portal nbsp South portal at Iselle di Trasquera railway station The picture was taken through a loophole of an old Italian World War II bunker The bunker s weapons were directed to the tunnel s south portal Present and future editCar carrying shuttle trains edit nbsp A car transport train arriving in Iselle di Trasquera railway stationThere is a car carrying shuttle between Brig and Iselle di Trasquera which provides a 20 minute train journey as an alternative to driving over the Simplon Pass The service began on 1 December 1959 As roads over the Simplon Pass steadily improved throughout the 1970s and 1980s the tunnel s shuttle schedule was cut back then ended altogether on 3 January 1993 Almost twelve years later on 12 December 2004 the car shuttle service began again and now runs about every 90 minutes Piggyback transport edit In the early 1990s a project to implement the rolling highway system of piggyback operations for transalpine freight on the Lotschberg Simplon axis was implemented Such operations were possible under the previous profile of the Simplon Tunnel but capacity would have been heavily restricted because its height was too low to carry trucks at the permitted maximum corner height of four metres 13 ft 1 1 2 in The clearance in the tunnel was therefore increased by lowering the rail trackbed This work began in 1995 and lasted eight years At the same time the tunnel vault was rehabilitated while the drainage tunnel was rebuilt A total of 200 000 m3 260 000 cu yd of rock was removed with pneumatic breakers In addition a new railway electrification system was installed using overhead electric rail instead of the tensioned cable normally used for overhead electrification so that the required 4 90 metre 16 ft 7 8 in height clearance could be achieved In the late 1980s a one kilometre 0 62 mi long overhead electric rail had been tested at 160 km h 99 mph Before this experiment trains running under overhead electric rails in Switzerland had been limited to 110 km h 68 mph and internationally to 80 km h 50 mph 6 Restricted rail operations were maintained during the entire construction period Expansion of access routes edit In order to expand the Lotschberg Simplon axis into a powerful transit axis various extensions to the access lines from Bern and Lausanne in the north and from Novara and Milan in the south have been made in recent years and decades The largest projects have dealt with the northern access from Basel Bern via Lotschberg Between 1976 and 2007 there were three major transformations First the remaining single track line between Spiez and Brig was dualled Later adjustments were made to the tunnel profile for piggyback traffic in places only widening one track was possible Finally the Lotschberg Base Tunnel partially opened in 2007 although the new tunnel still has a 21 kilometre 13 mile single track section this was done in order to save costs for the construction of the longer Gotthard Base Tunnel which was completed in 2016 Clearances were also raised for the piggyback traffic on the Italian side as well on the Simplon southern approach Here too for financial reasons at times only one line was cleared for the rolling highway South of Domodossola the single line to Novara via Lake Orta was electrified and modernized The classic approach to the Simplon from Paris and Lausanne less important for today s transit traffic was upgraded in the context of a nationwide rail upgrading project Rail 2000 between 1985 and 2004 Further adjustments are proposed In November 2004 the 7 kilometre long 4 3 mi new line between Salgesch and Leuk in the Rhone Valley was completed to replace the last single track bottleneck on the route Under the ZEB Future rail development projects package the maximum speed on the long straight sections of the Rhone valley lines will be increased from 160 to 200 km h 99 to 124 mph 2011 fire edit On 9 June 2011 a 300 m 984 ft section of the Simplon II tunnel s roof was seriously damaged when a northbound BLS freight train caught fire and stopped 3 km 1 9 mi into the tunnel The temperature exceeded 800 C 1 470 F and took more than two weeks to cool back to normal By agreement all repairs to the tunnels are the responsibility of the SBB which expected to reopen the tunnel in December 2011 The other tunnel remained in service 7 Repair work was completed in November 2011 8 Facts and figures editLength of tunnel I 19 803 m 12 305 mi Length of tunnel II 19 823 m 12 317 mi Elevation at north portal Brig 685 80 m 2 250 0 ft Elevation at crest of the tunnel 704 98 m 2 312 9 ft Elevation at south portal Iselle 633 48 m 2 078 3 ft Gradient on north side 2 Gradient on south side 7 1 in 143 1 Maximum rock overlay 2 150 m 7 050 ft below the Tunnelspitz of the Wasenhorn massif Start of construction on north side 22 November 1898 Start of construction of south side 21 December 1898 Breakthrough 24 February 1905 Inauguration 19 May 1906 First electrical operation 1 June 1906Spiral tunnel editOn the rail line north from Domodossola prior to the Simplon tunnels is the 2 968 metre 9 738 ft Varzo Spiral Tunnel probably the longest spiral tunnel in the world See the route diagram at the start of this subject In popular media editIn the 1957 novel From Russia with Love by Ian Fleming protagonist James Bond fights his enemy SMERSH agent Donovan Grant eventually killing him while passing through the Simplon Tunnel on the Orient Express In Against the Day by Thomas Pynchon Reef Traverse works on the Simplon Tunnel 9 Notes edit a b The Simplon Tunnel The Capricornian Rockhampton Qld National Library of Australia 15 October 1904 p 21 Retrieved 19 March 2013 The highest point above the tunnel lies near the Tunnelspitz at approximately 2 855 m 9 367 ft above sea level estimated from the Swisstopo topographic map 1 Andreas Henke Tunnelling in Switzerland pp 2 3 Inaugurato il tunnel del Sempione su accaddeoggi it a b Kalla Bishop P M 1971 Italian Railways Newton Abbott Devon England David amp Charles p 98 Erfolgreiche Stromschienenversuche im Simplontunnel Successful track trials in the Simplon tunnel Die Bundesbahn in German Darmstadt 3 268 1989 ISSN 0007 5876 Simplon badly damaged by fire Modern Railways Ian Allan October 2011 p 81 Switzerland Cleanup and repair work in the Simplon Tunnel completed on time UIC Communications Archived from the original on 2013 04 16 Retrieved 2012 07 19 Pynchon Thomas 2006 Against the Day New York New York The Penguin Group pp 652 et seq ISBN 1 59420 120 X References editMichel Delaloye Hrsg Simplon histoire geologie mineralogie Ed Fondation Bernard et Suzanne Tissieres Martigny 2005 ISBN 2 9700343 2 8 in German Frank Garbely Bau des Simplontunnels Die Streiks Unia Oberwallis 2006 in German Thomas Koppel Stefan Haas Hrsg Simplon 100 Jahre Simplontunnel AS Verlag Zurich 2006 ISBN 3 909111 26 2 Wolfgang Mock Simplon Tisch 7 Verlagsgesellschaft Koln 2005 ISBN 3 938476 09 5 in German M Rosenmund Uber die Anlage des Simplontunnels und dessen Absteckung in Jahresberichte der Geographisch Ethnographischen Gesellschaft in Zurich Band Band 5 1904 1905 S 71ff Digitalisat in German Hansrudolf Schwabe Alex Amstein 3 x 50 Jahre Schweizer Eisenbahnen in Vergangenheit Gegenwart und Zukunft Pharos Verlag Basel 1997 ISBN 3 7230 0235 8 in German Georges Tscherrig 100 Jahre Simplontunnel 2 Auflage Rotten Visp 2006 ISBN 3 907624 68 8 in German Enzyklopadie des Eisenbahnwesens Bd 9 Urban amp Schwarzenberg Berlin 1921 Directmedia Publishing Berlin 2007 Repr S 68 72 ISBN 3 89853 562 2 in German External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Simplon tunnel Francis Fox How the Swiss Built the Greatest Tunnel in the World 1905 German language site AlpenTunnel de Simplon Tunnel Winchester Clarence ed 1936 The Simplon Tunnel Railway Wonders of the World pp 1428 1435 description of the construction of the tunnelRecordsPreceded byGotthard Rail Tunnel Longest tunnel1906 1982 Succeeded byDaishimizu Tunnel Portal nbsp Switzerland 46 19 25 N 8 00 11 E 46 32361 N 8 00306 E 46 32361 8 00306 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Simplon Tunnel amp oldid 1183934435, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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