Skip to main content

The Hague’s Victory Tunnel opens

The Victory Boogie Woogie tunnel is part of the new 4km Rotterdamsebaan.
By David Arminas February 22, 2021 Read time: 1 min
Solar panels adorn the entrances of the Victory Boogie Woogie Tunnel in The Hague, Netherlands (photo © Ossip van Duivenbode)

The Dutch city of The Hague officially opens the Victory Boogie Woogie Tunnel today after more than five years of construction.

The twin-bore tunnel is part of the new 4km Rotterdamsebaan which runs from the Ypenburg junction (A4 and A13) to the Binckhorst Business Park near the centre of The Hague.

BAM Infra Nederland has been main contractor for the Rotterdamsebaan project at a cost of around €301 million. Work started in 2015 and includes two 450m-long ramps and 650m of cut and cover for the tunnel.

The tunnel, with a speed limit of 70km/h, is claimed to be the most sustainable tunnel in the Netherlands. Solar panels adorn the entrances and a fine particle dust reduction system manages the air inside the tunnel. Sustainable low-energy asphalt concrete - or LEAB asphalt after its Dutch acronym - has been used for road surfaces.

Sustainability measures in the construction process included the use of cleaner gas-to-liquid fuel for on-site machinery. GTL uses a refinery process to convert natural gas or other gaseous hydrocarbons into longer-chain hydrocarbons, such as gasoline or diesel fuel.

World Highways reported on the progress of construction in July last year.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • RAP Drum Benninghoven’s system in counter flow – The RAP solution for the future
    May 21, 2014
    Benninghoven’s Ralf Port talks about the German firm’s development with partner BAM of its counter flow parallel drum system for RAP material The asphalt industry constantly searches for new solutions in order to optimise processes within the asphalt plant. A major subject is the increase of RAP content in all recipes. Recycling Parallel Drum Systems work in various sizes and at various power levels. This technique has been established by different producers over the decades. However, all kinds of concepts
  • Stonehenge Bypass contract awarded to consortium
    October 3, 2022
    The Stonehenge Bypass contract has been awarded to a consortium.
  • SolarRoad units installed in cycle path in Estampes
    February 8, 2018
    French road building contractor Charier has introduced the SolarRoad kit (SRK) on a newly laid cycle path in Etampes, France. Two SRK units convert sunlight to electricity and provide lighting for a roundabout near Etampes, a small commune of around 26,000 people about 50km south-west of Paris. The installation helps Charier meet sustainability objectives within the framework of the Paris Agreement. An SRK has four elements of 2.5m x 3.5m and delivers around 3,500kWh per year, which according to Solar R
  • Tunnelling challenge on German project
    June 13, 2012
    A massive construction project has been underway deep in the heart of the Schnecktal valley area in Germany. From the surface, though, you would never be able to tell. The majority of the work is underground, as a joint-venture team led by German contractor Wayss and Freytag Ingenieurbau builds the nearly 7km long Finne Tunnel. After a few years of tunnel boring operations, the contractor is at work finishing the interior of the tunnel, slipforming first the tunnel’s floor and then a walkway with its GOMACO