Skip to main content

Ireland and Scotland link?

Politicians in Northern Ireland have again raised the prospect of bridge to link western Scotland the Irish island, according to media reports. The road and rail crossing as envisaged by the Democratic Union Party would cost close to €23 billion. It would run between the Irish town of Larne in County Antrim and the Dumfries and Galloway coastline in Scotland. The DUP said in its manifesto for the 2015 UK general election that there should be a feasibility study into building a bridge or tunnel.
March 1, 2018 Read time: 3 mins
The Sweden-to-Denmark Oresund Bridge: a template for a Scotland-Ireland crossing? (photo: Drago Prvulovic)
Politicians in Northern Ireland have again raised the prospect of bridge to link western Scotland the Irish island, according to media reports.


The road and rail crossing as envisaged by the Democratic Union Party would cost close to €23 billion. It would run between the Irish town of Larne in County Antrim and the Dumfries and Galloway coastline in Scotland.

The DUP said in its manifesto for the 2015 UK general election that there should be a feasibility study into building a bridge or tunnel.

The party again suggested that a link be constructed after recent remarks by the UK’s foreign secretary Boris Johnson called for a cross-Channel bridge between England and France during a visit by French president Macron to London.

Alan Dunlop, one of Scotland’s leading urban architects, has been a staunch backer of a crossing. He was recently interviewed on a BBC Scotland radio programme where he again suggested it would bring “exceptional” business potential to Scotland as well as all Ireland.

Dunlop, who is also a professor of architecture at the UK’s Liverpool University, told The Times newspaper that a bridge could create a “Celtic powerhouse”.

However, a road bridge-tunnel might prove too costly and difficult to build, according to Ronnie Hunter of the UK’s 5180 Institution Of Civil Engineers. In an interview with the Scotsman newspaper in May 2016, he said a bridge would have to be multi-span and require dozens of piers across the channel.

“There are numerous bridges in North America built across relatively shallow water which go on as causeways for mile after mile. But we’re not talking about shallow water here - this is essentially next to the Atlantic Ocean, in very deep water,” he reportedly said. “The length suits a tunnel. It would likely have to be a rail tunnel, rather than a road tunnel, as it is hard to get the ventilation right.”

Even so, speculation has focused on a design similar to the rail and road one connecting Denmark and Sweden across the Oresund Strait. The bridge runs for 8km and the tunnel for 4km.

But any Ireland-Scotland crossing would have to navigate Beaufort’s Dyke, a  deep sea trench around 10km off the Scottish coast. Apart from its 300m depth, the trench was used as a dumping ground for unwanted conventional and chemical munitions after the end of the Second World War in 1945.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Strong investment growth in the world’s highways was a key driver in John Deere and Wirtgen coming together
    December 21, 2017
    John Deere’s recent acquisition of the Wirtgen Group was driven by the way in which two leading equipment manufacturers could come together with no product overlap and target strong investment growth in the world’s highways sector
  • NCC picks up Eysturoy and Sandoy tunnel contracts in the Faroes
    November 15, 2016
    Swedish construction company NCC has signed a contract to build two sub-sea road tunnels in the Faroe Islands, an archipelago north of Scotland. The first project – the Eysturoy Tunnel between Eysturoy and Streymoy - will cost around €152 million. The value of second one – the Sandoy Tunnel between Streymoy and Sandoy – will cost about €120 million, but there is an option for the government-owned client, P/F Eystur- och Sandoyartunlar (EST), not to proceed. The government created the company, Eystur – og
  • Make the case for electronic tolling, ASECAP conference delegates heard
    September 14, 2015
    Mobility pricing and electronic tolling is the future, delegates to a recent ASECAP Study Days conference, reports Geoff Hadwick at the Lisbon event. The international road tolling industry is failing to make its case and the sector is losing out to other social and political lobby groups. As a result, “tolling is still on the sidelines”, according to the head of the Washington-based International Bridge, Tunnel and Turnpike Association. IBTTA chief executive Pat Jones issued his stark warning at the
  • China opens record-breaking bridge
    April 11, 2012
    China has opened the world's longest bridge over water, the 41.58km Jiaozhou Bay Bridge, which is said to have cost well over US$2 billion to build. It links the eastern port city of Qingdao to Huangdao Island across Jiaozhou Bay and is 4km longer than the previous longest bridge over water, the Lake Pontchartrain Causeway in Louisiana, USA. Opened in June, 2011 after four years of construction, the link is expected to carry some 30,000 vehicle/day and will reduce travel time by 30 minutes, although it is o