Skip to main content

Major UK tunnel project proposed

The UK’s Department for Transport (DfT) has put forward five alternate route options for a new highway connecting the cities of Manchester and Sheffield. The project looks likely to include a major tunnel section measuring as much as 20-30km in length that would run under the Peak District. The aim of the project would be to cut journey times between the two cities as the existing transport routes are prone to peak period congestion and delays at present. The route would connect either the M60 or M67 motorw
August 19, 2016 Read time: 2 mins
The UK’s 5432 Department for Transport (DfT) has put forward five alternate route options for a new highway connecting the cities of Manchester and Sheffield. The project looks likely to include a major tunnel section measuring as much as 20-30km in length that would run under the Peak District. The aim of the project would be to cut journey times between the two cities as the existing transport routes are prone to peak period congestion and delays at present. The route would connect either the M60 or M67 motorways close to Manchester with the M1 motorway on Sheffield’s northern side.

Should the tunnel construction get the go-ahead, it would be one of the longest road tunnels in the world and one of the UK’s most ambitious civil engineering projects.

No time schedule for the project has been put forward and nor have cost estimates been revealed. However the cost of building such a long tunnel with multiple traffic lanes would be extremely high and it is likely that twin bores would be required. Some of the more radical suggestions for the tunnel section of the project also include ways to ensure drivers maintain attention behind the wheel, such as installing palm trees at the roadside and murals along the tunnel walls.

The project is controversial however. The massive cost of constructing a tunnel of this length has been suggested as being impractical. Comments have been made that lower cost transport upgrades to road connections in the area would deliver a better return on investment.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK’s most congested routes
    June 4, 2019
    Drivers using the M6 motorway in the UK are in the unlucky situation of facing the worst congestion in the country. The latest official data reveals the M6 to suffer more congestion than any other route in the UK, taking over this unfavourable record from the M25 motorway running around London. The M6 is the UK’s longest motorway and runs from Rugby to Gretna in Scotland. The data shows that drivers using the route will face delays to some 210 million journeys when the current three year period of roadwork
  • Bertha ends her Alaskan Way voyage in Seattle
    December 21, 2017
    Seattle's State Route 99 viaduct is coming down. David Arminas was on site. Bertha, the world’s largest diameter earth pressure balance tunnel boring machine, with a cutterhead diameter of 17.5m, is no more. Her 2.7km journey underneath the waterfront area of Seattle finished on April 4 and the power went off for the last time on an extraordinary TBM that had finally completed an extraordinary job. “A small sidewalk job would have had more impact on city traffic than we have had,” says Brian Russell a v
  • Tunnel breakthrough for new Auckland link in New Zealand
    October 8, 2014
    Auckland’s Western Ring Route project update - Mary Bell writes. A number of integrated projects in Auckland, New Zealand, will improve the lot of road users and cyclists, and significantly alter the topography of the city’s motorway. On September 29th the tunnel boring machine digging the first of twin road tunnels beneath the city broke into daylight after 10 months underground. The new 2.4km-long Waterview tunnels will connect the city’s Northwestern and Southwestern motorways, each carrying three lane
  • US$3.9 billion Virginia bridge and tunnel project delayed
    April 10, 2024
    Virginia’s US$3.9 billion Hampton Roads Bridge - Tunnel project is delayed.