Skip to main content

VIDEO: Life in the deteriorating lane – Pennsylvania Turnpike

October 17, 2016
Nothing lasts forever, including – and perhaps especially – highways. One fine example of this is a 21km section of the original 580km Pennsylvania Turnpike in the US state of Pennsylvania.

As the video shows, vegetation, animals and cyclists have slowly been reclaiming part of what was hailed as an engineering masterpiece when it was opened in 1940.

The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission sold most of the disused section to the Southern Alleghenies Conservancy for $1 in 2001. The crumbling concrete strip is now managed by Friends of the Pike 2 Bike, a coalition of non-profit groups.

Many videos exist of people walking and bicycling down the road and the images, while at once very scenic, are also very melancholic.

It was called the Tunnel Highway because of its seven tunnels: Blue Mountain, Kittatinny Mountain, Tuscarora Mountain, Sideling Hill, Rays Hill, Allegheny Mountain and Laurel Hill. There was one tunnel through each mountain and the highway was reduced to a single lane in each direction through each tunnel. These tunnels were originally built as part of the South Pennsylvania Railroad. One short tunnel was bypassed during the original construction of the Turnpike.

By the late 1950s, the turnpike was heavily congested. To alleviate the situation, there was twinning of four tunnels - construction a second, parallel, two-lane tunnel – and also bypassing and closure of the other three.

The tunnelled section was abandoned in 1968 when a new bypass route was built uphill and parallel to it.

But all is not lost. Videos exist of %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal people travelling Visit www.youtube.com page false http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OOP_QoizcWc#t=138.89297 false false%> the now abandoned section.

An especially good video shows how the tunnelled section %$Linker: 2 External <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary /> 0 0 0 oLinkExternal was built Visit www.youtube.com page false http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1pYWj64bXk4 false false%>.

Related Content

  • ARTBA announces student video awards
    October 21, 2016
    The winners of the 6th annual Student Transportation Video Contest by the American Road & Transportation Builders Association’s (ARTBA) have now been announced. High school students from Washington state and Massachusetts, an undergraduate at New York University and a graduate student at Carnegie Mellon were all named as winners. The selections were announced during the recent ARTBA National Convention, held in Tucson, Arizona. The winners will each receive a US$500 cash prize. The association received 3
  • McKinsey to present major construction sector report at bauma
    March 3, 2016
    Consultancy McKinsey and Company will launch its report Perspectives on the Construction Equipment Industry in Europe during the upcoming bauma exhibition in Munich. The report will be presented at joint seminar with the CECE – Committee for European Construction Equipment – in the bauma fairgrounds on April 13 when leading McKinsey analysts and CECE officials discuss main trends and challenges facing manufactures and buyers of equipment.
  • A free bridge? You’ve got to be kidding.
    February 18, 2015
    Nothing will stop construction of another bridge crossing the Detroit River to ease traffic congestion around North America’s most important economic border. The New International Trade Crossing will be entirely financed and owned by the Canadian government under a public private partnership. It will link the US city of Detroit, in the state of Michigan, with the Canadian city of Windsor in the province of Ontario. The two cities already have the toll road Ambassador Bridge as well as a toll road tunnel and
  • Major Norwegian tunnel project opening
    September 20, 2019
    Norway’s landmark tunnel project is due to open at the end of 2019. The Ryfylke tunnel will be both the longest and deepest undersea road tunnel built anywhere in the world when it opens to traffic. The new link connects the city of Stavanger with Strand in the district of Ryfylke. Two other tunnels form part of the project to build the new Ryfast link. These are the Hundvåg tunnel and the Eiganes tunnel, due to open in February 2020 once finishing and testing works have been completed. The opening of all t