Posted by Joseph LeMay on June 7, 2008 
I imagine it is quite a bore going through 14 miles of darkness. Great shot!
Posted by hemiadda2d on June 7, 2008 
I have not seen this tunnel in any shots before--is it straight? What grade does it bypass? What pass is it on?
Posted by Steve Vlasak on June 8, 2008 
I know it sounds long, but it's not quite as long as you think. It's 14.7 km or 9.13 miles still longer than I like to deal with. I used work through the Cascade Tunnel in Washington state, and at 8 miles, that was long enough for me. Nice shot, it's beautiful country up there.
Posted by Darren Boes on June 8, 2008 
The Mount MacDonald Tunnel was completed in 1988 beneath Rogers Pass in the Selkirk Mountains of British Columbia. It is nearly straight (a curve at the east end I believe), and on a grade of about 1% westbound. It was constructed to avoid the "Beaver Hill" between Rogers and Stoney Creek on the east side of the pass. The pass itself has been bypassed since 1916 when the 5 mile Connaught Tunnel was completed.
Posted by on November 29, 2013 
It is generally thought that the Mount Macdonald tunnel in British Columbia on the Canadian Pacific main line is the longest railway tunnel in the Americas. Built between 1984 and 1988 it is slightly shorter than the Tunnel #4 of the Sargento – Cuajone tunnels in Peru. They are located on the Southern Peru Copper Corporation (SPCC) line and they opened to railroad traffic in November of 1975, i.e. 13 years before the Canadian tunnel. Despite that, perhaps because of lack of publicity about the industrial SPCC railroad’s Cuajone line, it is still claimed that Mount Macdonald tunnel “is the longest railway tunnel in the western hemisphere” (See the Canadian Railway Hall of Fame web site). The SPCC tunnel #4 is 14724 m / 48307 ft / 9.15 miles long. It belongs to a formidable series of 5 successive tunnels - separated by very short open sections – 27km / 16.8 miles long in total. For more information, refer to RPN pictures 343067, 343135, 343255 etc.
Posted by on November 29, 2013 
It is generally thought that the Mount Macdonald tunnel in British Columbia on the Canadian Pacific main line is the longest railway tunnel in the Americas. Built between 1984 and 1988 it is slightly shorter than the Tunnel #4 of the Sargento – Cuajone tunnels in Peru. They are located on the Southern Peru Copper Corporation (SPCC) line and they opened to railroad traffic in November of 1975, i.e. 13 years before the Canadian tunnel. Despite that, perhaps because of lack of publicity about the industrial SPCC railroad’s Cuajone line, it is still claimed that Mount Macdonald tunnel “is the longest railway tunnel in the western hemisphere” (See the Canadian Railway Hall of Fame web site). The SPCC tunnel #4 is 14724 m / 48307 ft / 9.15 miles long. It belongs to a formidable series of 5 successive tunnels - separated by very short open sections – 27km / 16.8 miles long in total. For more information, refer to RPN pictures 343067, 343135, 343255 etc.
- Post a Comment -