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A tunnel is an underground passage. When designed for use by traffic, it may be called an
underpass.
It may be for pedestrians and/or cyclists, for general road traffic, for motor vehicles
only, for rail traffic, or for a canal. Some tunnels are constructed purely for carrying water (for consumption, for hydroelectric purposes or as sewers), while others carry
other services such as telecommunications cables.
Tunnels are dug in various types of materials, from soft clays to hard rocks. Depending on the type of soil, a method of
excavation is choosen. When digging soft clays, the New Austrian Tunneling method or NATM is used. When digging in weak rocks a
tunnel boring machine or TBM is used. In hard rocks blasting is usually the fastest method, as in the Norwegian
tunneling method.
Various combinations of these methods are also possible.
The central part of a metro network is usually built in tunnels. To allow non-level
crossings, some lines are in deeper tunnels than others. At metro stations there are often also pedestrian tunnels to walk from
one platform to another.
At train stations of ground-level railways there are often one or more
pedestrian tunnels under the railway to reach the platform(s).
A subway in the UK is a pedestrian tunnel that goes under a road.
The St. Gotthard Tunnel opened in Switzerland on September 5,
1980 as the world's longest highway tunnel at
10.14 miles (16.32 km) stretching from Goschenen to Airolo.
Construction
Cut-and-cover is a simple method of construction for shallow tunnels where a trench is excavated and roofed over. Strong supporting beams are necessary to
avoid the danger of the tunnel collapsing.
Shallow tunnels are of the cut-and-cover type (if under water of the immersed-tube type), deep tunnels are excavated, often
using a tunnelling shield. For intermediate levels, both methods
are possible.
Tunnel boring machines can be used to automate the
entire tunneling process.
Wartime tunnels
- Castles, sappers
- trench warfare: Crimea, US Civil War, WWI
- Germany WWII, V2 factories, slave labor
- North Korea, infiltrators, midget subs...
- Japan, Corregidor, etc. (Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon?)
- Vietnam, tunnel rats ("Platoon"?), spider holes
- Cold War: nuclear bunkers, etc.
Examples of tunnels
See also: List of tunnels, Wind tunnel, Underground city.
"Tunnel" was also the name of a large New York City nightclub
with multiple rooms themed after subway tunnels. It was perhaps best known for hosting Kurfew, its gay-oriented Saturday night parties with
resident DJ Johnny Vicious. Tunnel closed its doors soon after the demise of nearby Twilo, the victim of the owner's debts and of Rudy Giuliani's
quality-of-life campaign.
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