Daylighting (tunnels)

Daylighting a tunnel is to remove its "roof" or overlying rock and soil, thus exposing the railway or roadway to daylight. This could also be seen as converting the tunnel to a railway or roadway cut. Tunnels are often daylighted to improve vertical or horizontal clearances, for example to accommodate double-stack container trains or electrifying rail lines, where increasing the size of the tunnel bore would be impractical.

List of daylighted tunnels

This list is incomplete; you can help by expanding it.
The short remaining portion of Liverpool's Lime Street Station tunnel can be seen west of Edge Hill Station.

References

  1. The Encyclopedia of New Zealand: Daylighting a Manawatū Gorge tunnel
  2. F. C. Weeks et al., "Tunnel 'Daylighting' on the Alaska Railroad," Transportation Research Record No. 1119, Geotechnology (1987).

See also

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