Tyne Tunnel

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Tyne Tunnel northern entrance before refurbishment Tyne Tunnel North Entrance - geograph.org.uk - 149562.jpg
Tyne Tunnel northern entrance before refurbishment

The Tyne Tunnel is the name given to two 2-lane vehicular toll tunnels under the River Tyne in North East England. Originally opened in 1967 and expanded in 2011, the tunnels connect the town of Jarrow on the south bank of the river with North Shields and Wallsend on the northern side. The tunnels are approximately 7 miles (11 km) downstream, to the east of Newcastle upon Tyne. The Tyne Tunnel constitutes a part of the A19 road.

Contents

History

Tyne Tunnel Act 1946
Act of Parliament
Coat of arms of the United Kingdom (1901-1952).svg
Long title An Act to authorise the construction of tunnels for vehicular and pedestrian traffic under the river Tyne between Wallsend in the county of Northumberland and Jarrow in the county of Durham and approaches to such tunnels and for other purposes.
Citation 9 & 10 Geo. 6. c. xl
Dates
Royal assent 26 July 1946
Text of statute as originally enacted

A scheme for the construction of a set of three tunnels under the Tyne was put forward by the Durham and Northumberland county councils in 1937. After prolonged negotiations with the Ministry of Transport, the scheme was approved in 1943. The Tyne Tunnel Act 1946, the legislative instrument necessary to enable the construction of the tunnels, received royal assent in 1946. Postwar restrictions on capital expenditure delayed the construction of the vehicular tunnel, but work started on the smaller tunnels for pedestrians and cyclists in 1947.

First Tyne motor vehicle tunnel

Tyne Tunnel
TT2 Ltd logo.png
Overview
RouteUK road A19.svg A19
Crosses River Tyne
Start Jarrow
End Howdon
Operation
Opened1968 (1968)
Closed25 February 2011
Reopened21 November 2011
Owner North East Combined Authority
OperatorTT2 Ltd
TrafficMotor vehicles
Toll£2.20 (Cars)
Technical
No. of lanes 2
Operating speed30 mph (48 km/h)

The vehicle tunnel is 5,500 feet (1,700 metres) long and has a diameter of 31 ft 3 in (9.5 m) with a roadbed 24 ft (7.3 m). It was built by Edmund Nuttall Limited and was opened by Queen Elizabeth II on 19 October 1967, but commenced operational use only in 1968, on completion of the northern link roads. It was designed to handle 25,000 vehicles per day. The original toll for cars was 2s 6d (12.5p). On completion of the second Tyne road tunnel, which opened with a single lane in each direction, the original 1967 Tyne Tunnel closed in February 2011 for a complete revamp, which included the installation of a safety corridor throughout its length. Once this work was complete, it reopened in November 2011 as the northbound tunnel, leaving the new tunnel to handle southbound traffic.

Second Tyne motor vehicle tunnel

New Tyne Crossing
TT2 Ltd logo.png
Overview
RouteUK road A19.svg A19
Crosses River Tyne
Start Howdon
End Jarrow
Operation
Work begun2008
Opened25 February 2011 (2011-02-25)
Owner North East Combined Authority
OperatorTT2 Ltd
TrafficMotor vehicles
Toll£2.20 (Cars)
Technical
No. of lanes 2
Operating speed40 mph (64 km/h)
Southern entrance Tyne Tunnel - Southern Entrance - geograph.org.uk - 324288.jpg
Southern entrance

In March 2004 the Tyne and Wear Integrated Transport Authority launched a scheme to build a second, £139 million tunnel. The tunnel is slightly to the east of the existing tunnel, and the pairing allows each tunnel to serve two lanes of traffic, each travelling in the same direction; the original tunnel had two single lanes of traffic in opposing directions, representing an avoidable risk. The tunnel is 1.6 kilometres (0.99 mi) in length. [1]

The UK government gave the go-ahead for the scheme in July 2005. Construction work started in spring 2008, with the new tunnel opening to two-lane bi-directional traffic on 25 February 2011, at which point the original tunnel closed for a ten-month refurbishment.

The timeline for the new Tyne Tunnel was as follows:

The tunnel was constructed under a private finance initiative 30-year "design–build–finance–operate" contract by Bouygues Construction.

Onshore sections of the new tunnel were built using the cut-and-cover method. Under-river sections of the tunnel were prefabricated, floated into position, immersed into a dredged trench, and covered with rocks. By beginning of November 2009, the land approaches to the tunnel had been excavated, and construction of the tunnel, in four 300-foot (90 m) sections, had been completed nearby. The dredger used to excavate the river section of the tunnel cutting arrived on site on 4 November 2009 to excavate 400,000 cubic metres of sediment, which was used to infill the defunct Tyne Dock, reclaiming 13 acres (53,000 m2) of land for use by Port of Tyne. [3] Both ends of the tunnel finally met on 26 May 2010.

Safety

The new tunnel is fitted with a fixed fire suppression system which releases a fine mist to contain fires to help motorists leave safely and to prevent damage to the tunnel structure. There is also a separate evacuation corridor which runs adjacent to the main tunnel. The old tunnel, now fully refurbished, includes many of the same safety features.

The New Tyne crossing is claimed to be one of the safest in the UK, [2] thanks to a state-of-the-art active fire suppression system which is now included in its design. It is the first in the UK to be fitted with a water mist active fire suppression system, and will further ensure the safety of thousands of people who will travel through it every day.

The original 1960s-built tunnel was slated as of one of the least safe in Europe in 2000, according to a study. Inspectors visited 25 major tunnels around Europe after fire devastated the Mont Blanc Tunnel under the Alps between France and Italy. The Tyne Tunnel was officially rated as "poor" and languished near the bottom of the European league table. The inspectors found it had no automatic fire alarm system, poor lighting, no laybys or hard shoulder, and an emergency walkway that could be reached only by able-bodied people. They also criticised its smoke extraction system. These deficiencies were addressed during the refurbishment of the original road tunnel in 2011.

Tolls

As of 2023 the toll charge is £220.20; vans, trucks, and buses, £4444.40. [4] Motorcycles use the tunnel free and Blue Badge holders can apply for an exemption account. [5] A 10% discount is available to those who pre-pay via the internet.

In May 2020, the operator of the Tyne Tunnel, TT2, introduced an option to 'pay later'.

In November 2021, the Tyne Tunnel launched [6] open-road-tolling, a cashless system that saw the complete removal of barriers and physical payment booths.

Tyne cyclist and pedestrian tunnels

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References

  1. "The Tyne Tunnels" (PDF). Chartered Institution of Highways and Transportation . Retrieved 27 August 2022.
  2. 1 2 "New Tyne Crossing Web-site" . Retrieved 16 January 2012.
  3. "Arrival of New Tyne Crossing dredger imminent". Materials Handling World Magazine. 4 November 2009. Archived from the original on 8 November 2009. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
  4. "Tyne Tunnel toll information". TT2 Ltd. Retrieved 4 June 2023.
  5. "Toll Exemption Accounts – Tyne Tunnels". TT2 Limited. Retrieved 16 July 2019.
  6. "North East Businesses Back Plans To Speed-Up Tyne Tunnels". Business Mondays. Retrieved 3 November 2021.
Next vehicle crossing upstream River Tyne Next vehicle crossing downstream
Tyne Bridge
A167 and UK traffic sign 967.svg 725
Tyne Tunnel
Grid reference NZ329660
None
North Sea
Next crossing upstream River Tyne Next crossing downstream
Tyne Cyclist & Pedestrian Tunnels
Tunnel
Tyne Tunnel
Grid reference NZ329660
Shields Ferry
Pedestrian ferry and UK traffic sign 967.svg 1

54°59′16″N1°29′08″W / 54.98778°N 1.48556°W / 54.98778; -1.48556