Skip to main content

German court decides for Fehmarnbelt

Danish state-owned company Femern is responsible for the 18km road-rail tunnel.
By David Arminas November 18, 2020 Read time: 1 min
Work continues in June on a breakwater for the harbour in Rødbyhavn where sections of the tunnel will be constructed and floated out for placement (photo copyright Femern/Nils Lund Pedersen)

Germany’s federal administrative court has decided that the planned Fehmarnbelt Tunnel between the Danish island of Lolland and the German island of Fehmarn can proceed.

The case to delay construction began at the end of September. Six of the nine complaints were recently dismissed unconditionally while three complaints were settled out of court, according to the German newspaper Suddeutsche Zeitung.

The Danish state-owned company Femern is financing, building and will operate the approximately 18km road and rail tunnel under the Baltic Sea at a cost around €7.5 billion to construct. The tunnel, expected to open in 2029, should reduce the passenger train time from Hamburg in northern Germany to the Danish capital Copenhagen by around two hours, making the journey around two and a half hours.

A Rambøll-Arup-TEC consultancy joint venture is engaged in a client consultancy services contract with Femern. The joint venture has also worked on other landmark infrastructure projects, including the Øresund Tunnel in Denmark, the City Tunnel in Malmö, Sweden, the Medway Tunnel in England, as well as underground rail systems in Amsterdam and Copenhagen.

COWI is carrying out the detailed design of the tunnel (north tunnel section, south tunnel section, and ramps and portals). Meanwhile, SWECO is handling the design for the dredging and reclamation work.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Planning Netherland's underground highways
    May 15, 2012
    The first agreements for Amsterdam’s proposed underground highway have now been reached. These have been made by the Dutch Minister for the Environment and Transport as well as Amsterdam local authority and the province of North-Holland. Under the agreed terms, the A10 highway will feature 12 lanes of traffic in four 1.2km tunnels under the capital, Amsterdam. The project will also include building metro and rail lines underground.
  • Final Lower Thames Crossing approval awaited
    November 7, 2022
    Work in the UK includes a twin bore tunnel under the River Thames east of London.
  • Cebu-Cordova Link Expressway opens
    April 28, 2022
    The 8.5km expressway, in which Cowi was owners engineer for the client Metro Pacific Tollways, incorporates the longest and tallest bridge in the Philippines.
  • Major Europe-Asia bridge connection in Turkey
    July 1, 2014
    The 3rd Bosporus Bridge and the Northern Marmara Motorway will improve transport links between Europe and Asia and cut chronic congestion in Istanbul, Turkey’s largest city - Mike Woof reports Work is now well underway on the 3rd Bosporus Bridge and the Northern Marmara Motorway, providing a new link for Turkish city Istanbul and the region as a whole. This enormous bridge and highway project is breaking several records for Turkey in terms of scale, as well as setting a number of international records for e