A railway tunnel underneath the Bosphorus Strait has been opened in Turkey, creating a new link between the Asian and European shores of Istanbul. The Marmaray tunnel is the world's first connecting two continents, and is designed to withstand earthquakes.
It was inaugurated on the 90th anniversary of the Republic of Turkey. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has for years championed the undersea engineering project, first conceived by an Ottoman sultan in 1860.Work began in 2004, but archaeological excavations delayed construction. The underwater section runs for 1.4 km, but in total the tunnel is 13.6 km long.
Japan invested $1bn of the $4bn total cost of the project, named Marmaray, which is a conflation of the nearby Sea of Marmara with ray, the Turkish word for rail.
In theory it brings closer the day when it will be possible to travel from London to Beijing via Istanbul by train. The Marmaray project will upgrade existing suburban train lines to create a direct link joining the southern part of the city across the Bosphorus Strait.
Istanbul is one of the world's biggest cities, with about 16 million people. Some two million cross the Bosphorus every day via just two bridges, causing severe traffic congestion. The rail service will be capable of carrying 75,000 people per hour in either direction.
While creating a transport axis between the east and west points of the city, I believe it will soothe the problem of congestion, said Istanbul's Mayor Kadir Topbas.
But critics of Prime Minister Erdogan have seen the tunnel as one of his grandiose construction projects for the city where he used to be mayor.
Detractors of his proposals, including a third airport, a parallel canal, a third bridge over the Bosphorus and a second tunnel - for cars, south of Marmaray - say they illustrate Mr Erdogan's pharaonic ambitions.
Authorities came under fire earlier this year when protesters opposed plans to redevelop a park in Istanbul. Widespread violence between anti-government demonstrators and security forces ensued.
Top Comments
Disclaimer & comment rulesAnyone ever been to Turkey?
Oct 30th, 2013 - 05:03 pm 0For goodness sake don't let them into the EU......Swindle swindle and for something different...Swindle.
Took a taxi from Izmir to Ephesus 160 km round trip...The taxi driver pulls up at the gas station...there's a guy stood at the pumps with a wad of notes....nothing goes through the till....no receipt.
.....No no no you don't pay to go in...give me dollars and I pay for you....
This isn't the way we came......, I take you to friends outlets...lots of great deals...
Lost in excess of 700 dollars that day.......
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