Eppenberg Tunnel

The Eppenberg Tunnel is a railway tunnel in the Canton of Solothurn, Switzerland. It is part of the 'Future Development of Railway Infrastructure' plan (in German: Zukünftige Entwicklung der Bahninfrastruktur or 'ZEB') and increases capacity on the Aarau - Olten line in the Schönenwerd – Däniken section.

Eppenberg Tunnel
Construction site at Wöschnau portal, August 20
Overview
Official nameGerman: Eppenbergtunnel,
LineAarau - Olten line,
LocationBetween Wöschnau and Schönenwerd
Coordinates47.36°N 7.99°E / 47.36; 7.99 (Eppenberg Tunnel, western portal)47.38°N 8.02°E / 47.38; 8.02 (Eppenberg Tunnel, astern portal)
SystemSwiss Federal Railways (SBB CFF FFS)
StartWöschnau, canton of Solothurn, Switzerland
EndSchönenwerd, canton of Solothurn, Switzerland
Operation
Work begun2015)
Opened12 October 2020)
OwnerSBB CFF FFS
OperatorSBB CFF FFS
TrafficRailway
CharacterPassenger, Freight
Technical
Length3.114 km (1.935 mi)
No. of tracksOne double track tube
Track gauge1,435 mm (4 ft 8 12 in) standard gauge
Electrified15 kV 16.7 Hz

A particularly constraining bottleneck in the Swiss rail infrastructure is in the section between Aarau and Olten, which has only two tracks at Eppenberg-Wöschnau, Schönenwerd and Gretzenbach. The route has to be shared by international and national passenger trains as well as freight. Hence quadrupling the complete line between Aarau and Olten has high priority among infrastructure projects.

The main purpose of the tunnel is to increase capacity. The two additional tracks in parallel with the existing double track line will effectively create a four track line.

The Council of States adopted the law authoring the 'ZEB' programme in the spring session of 2009, authorising the budget for the Eppenberg tunnel. Due to the large financial requirements for the new NRLA rail link through the Alps, construction of the Eppenberg tunnel only began in 2015.

Planning

The project is planned and managed by Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) Infrastructure in Olten. The Eppenberg tunnel is the core of the approximately 3.5 km long new line, which will pass south of the center of Schönenwerd and will have a straighter alignment than the existing line, which has a tight curve in Schönenwerd. Nominal line speed in the tunnel is 160 km/h. [1] Revenue services through the tunnel will begin with the new timetable on December 13, 2020.

The western tunnel portal is located in the area of the municipality of Gretzenbach. Where the future tunnel passes under the road, it was be built by the cut and cover method. The tunnel will be 3114m long, this length is divided into the 125m cut and cover section at the Gretzenbach portal, the 2616m tunnel section (around 600 meters with the hydroshield method) and the 373m cut and cover section at Wöschnau portal.

The eastern tunnel portal will be built to the west of the Wöschnau district. In the vicinity of the future underpass under Route 5, a deep hole was dug in which the tunnel boring machine that excavated the main part of the tunnel was assembled.

As part of the same plan, two overpasses will be built in the approach to Olten station, which will largely eliminate at-grade crossings at the Olten junction.

Construction

In advance, the SBB built a new signal box in Wöschnau for traffic management during the construction period.

In autumn 2014, work began on the construction site near Wöschnau and Gretzenbach. This included clearing, earth moving, slope protection, demolition work, road construction and other measures. The Gretzenbach river was diverted. The substructure for the additional track began at Däniken.

On 2 May 2015, a tunnel construction party with the official groundbreaking took place at the construction site near Wöschnau, in which Federal Counsellor Doris Leuthard, the SBB Group Management, the Government Council of the Canton of Aargau and the Government of the Canton of Solothurn participated.[2]

ARGE Marti Eppenberg won the contract for the project for CHF885mio. The construction company Huber from Eppenberg-Wöschnau was a contractor.

The excavation of the tunnel was used to fill the dismantled Kölliken hazardous waste landfill.[3]

Operation

The SBB inaugurated the tunnel on 12 October.[1] Revenue services through the tunnel will begin with the new timetable on 13 December 2020. [4]

Map


Alignment of the Eppenberg Tunnel

References

  1. "Eppenberg tunnel opens for traffic". Railway Gazette International. Railway Gazette International. 14 October 2020. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
  2. "15-Minuten-Takt – Startschuss für Ausbau werk=20 minuten.ch". 2015-05-02. Retrieved 2018-05-06.
  3. Adrian Meyer (2016). "Die Spuren der Schandtat von Kölliken sind beseitigt – Der Dreck ist weg". Blick.ch. Retrieved 2018-05-06.
  4. "Erste Testfahrten durch neuen SBB-Eppenbergtunnel". Derbund.ch. 2020-09-11. Retrieved 2020-09-30.
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