Skip to main content

Faroes: NCC careful of Sandoy Tunnel work around St Magnus Cathedral

NCC is careful to not disturb the 800-year old St Magnus Cathedral on Sandoy Island.
By David Arminas March 17, 2020 Read time: 2 mins
Care is being taken for drilling work in the Faroe Islands - image courtesy © of Ibrandify, Dreamstime.com

Swedish contractor NCC says extra care is being taken while boring close to an ancient Cathedral for the Sandoy Tunnel Project in the Faroe Islands.

NCC is blasting adjacent to the 800 years old St Magnus Cathedral in the village of Kirkjubøur on the island of Streymoy. The ruin is the largest medieval building in the Faroe Islands and the government has approached the United Nations to have it listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

The cathedral is also close to a section of the10.5km subsea Sandoy Tunnel under construction between Streymoy and Sandoy. NCC says that is limiting its tunnelling operations to reduce vibrations of the rock and earth layers around the ruin.

NCC picked up the Sandoy Tunnel Project as well as the 11km-long Eysturoy Tunnel Project in early 2016.

Work started in 2017 on 10.5m-wide Eysturoy Tunnel that now connects the island of Streymoy to the island of Eysturoy - the towns of Skálafjørður and Tórshavn. It runs under the Bay of Skálafjørður using two tunnels that connect to a roundabout under the seabed at mid-way. The lowest point is to be 187m below sea level.

Meanwhile, work started in 2018 on the 10.6km Sandoy Tunnel that, when it opens in 2023, will connect the island of Sandoy to the greater part of the Faroese infrastructure. Lowest point of the 9.5m-wide tunnel will be 157m below sea level. The tunnel will surface in Traðardalur between the villages of Skopun and Sandur. On the island of Streymoy it will surface in Gamlarætt. Similar to the Eysturoy tunnel, the steepest inclination will be 5%.

Both tunnels will be tolled.

The rugged Faroe Islands are where the Norwegian Sea and the North Atlantic Ocean meet, and lie halfway between Norway and Iceland - 320km north-northwest of mainland Scotland. They cover around 1,400km² with a population of close to 50,000 and are an autonomous country within the Kingdom of Denmark.

The Faroe’s six main islands, with around 90% of the population, are connected by road. There are also 17 land tunnels. The various islands are connected by two underwater tunnels, in addition to three bridges and seven ferry lines.

Related Content

  • Third stage of Sydney’s WestConnex tunnel to be 1km longer
    December 4, 2014
    Changes to the third stage of the planned WestConnex motorway have been announced by Duncan Gay, Roads Minister of Australia’s New South Wales state. The motorway tunnel will be 8km, around 1km longer than initially announced under the US$9.7 billion WestConnex project of 33km of new roads around the city of Sydney. The changes are not likely to cost more, according to the NSW government. The third stage would cover the route between Haberfield and St. Peters and be constructed between 2018 and 2023.
  • Romanian bridge project well underway
    June 8, 2022
    Romania’s Braila Bridge project is well underway.
  • Turkish trans-continental tunnel to tie Asia and Europe
    April 22, 2014
    Excavation work is in hand for the Eurasia Tunnel in Turkey. South Korean contractor SK Engineering and Construction (SK E&C) is carrying out the excavation work as part of a BOT contract. The project is costing some US$1.24 billion and the 5.4km tunnel will provide a new trans-continental connection between the towns of Goztepe and Kazlicesme when it opens in 2017. Running below the Bosporus Strait, the tunnel is expected to reduce the travel time to 15 minutes from the current 100 minutes. The Eurasia Tun
  • Bulgaria plans for operating road infrastructure
    February 21, 2012
    There is a lot of work to do on Bulgarian roads, but the government has plans to increase the length of highways built each year as Krasimir Krastanov reports. Bulgarian roads with a pavement make up 98.4% of all the country's roads, while 92.5% of them have an asphalt surface and 82.8% of them are able to carry 10tonnes/axle.