Australian Science Illustrated – Issue 51 2017

(Ben Green) #1

56 | SCIENCE ILLUSTRATED


Construction killed


the initiator
Favre was not an engineer by training and had very little experience with tunnel
construction. Nevertheless, he believed that he could build the St. Gotthard
tunnel in record time, but the project killed him and cost his family a fortune.

T


he man who agreed to build the
world’s longest tunnel had neither
studied maths nor geology or logistics,
he had only attended brief courses of the
subjects. Louis Favre of Switzerland was
born in 1826 in Chene-Bourg near Geneva
as the son of a carpenter. When he was
young, he travelled about France,
carrying out different construction

projects, and before tendering for the St.
Gotthard tunnel, his major engineer-ing
project was a 1-km-long tunnel.
Favre was a hearty, energetic, and
optimistic man, and he expected to be
able to build the 15-km-long railway
tunnel so quickly and cheaply that he
would earn an impressive bonus.
However, new problems emerged all the

time, so the deadline could not be made.
On 19 July 1879, he had a stroke and died
inside the dark tunnel at the age of 53.
The work was not completed as quickly as
he had hoped, and the resulting penalties
were a costly affair for his family.

moved into the St. Gotthard Massif – up to
30 degrees at the centre of the tunnel.
On 28 July 1875, an Italian worker had
had enough of the unbearable working
conditions. He refused to enter the smoke-
filled, reeking tunnel, and soon, a strike was
on. The workers blocked the entrance and
demanded a raise of 1 franc per day.
Louise Favre telegraphed for help, and

the next day, lots of policemen arrived. The
striking workers were defeated, and four
were killed. The news of the bloody
operation triggered a debate in Switzerland
concerning safety. It was dangerous to work
in the tunnel, and the four dead workers
were not the only ones. According to official
data, a total of 199 workers lost their lives,
and almost all reports said the same: The

careless worker was hit by a falling rock,
killed in an explosion, or caught between the
wagons which carried rocks out of the
tunnel. There were also accidents outside
the tunnel. In September 1877, a dynamite
storehouse in Airolo exploded, causing a
major fire in the village.
Strike and accidents slowed down the
progress of the tunnel, and Louis Favre had

1900
About 1 million t of goods
pass through the tunnel.

(^1908)
The Swiss Railways take
over train services.
1885-94
The railway is secured
by the military.
1882
Grandiose inauguration of
the world's longest tunnel.
JUPITER IMAGES
LOUIS FAVRE
(1826-79)
TECHNOLOGY TUNNELS

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