Australian Science Illustrated – Issue 51 2017

(Ben Green) #1
54 | SCIENCE ILLUSTRATED

1875
Workers go on strike. Four lose
their lives in police attack.


1879
The man behind the tunnel,
Louis Favre, dies.

1880
The two tunnel
teams meet.

1881
The first work train passes
through the tunnel.

As soon as railways began to spread in
Europe, plans were made for a railway tunnel
through the Alps, and in 1869, Switzerland
held an international conference to discuss it.
Elsewhere on the continent, engineers
had built similar tunnels, but the St.
Gotthard Massif had not yet
been challenged; partly because
the tunnel would be the world’s
longest, and partly because the
railway had to climb 1,100 m into
the mountains for the tunnel to
be as short as possible. Back
then, train engines could only
manage a climb of 1 m per 40 m
of rails, so the ascent was also a
huge engineering challenge.

SIGNED UTOPIAN
CONTRACT
But the 15-km-long tunnel itself
was the most difficult and prestigious part,
everybody agreed. A limited liability
company set up for the purpose was asked
to find a contractor, who dared to take on
the job as cheaply as possible.
Two tenders were received, one from
Italian engineer Severino Grattoni, who

had previously been responsible for complex
tunnel projects, and one from Louis Favre of
Switzerland, who was an experienced
contractor, but had very limited experience
with tunnels. The longest tunnel he ever
built was 1 km long. Favre’s tender was

much cheaper than the Italian one, and the
Swiss even expected to build the tunnel in
six years – two years faster than the limited
liability company had budgeted for. If Louis
Favre built the tunnel in six years, he would
receive a major cash bonus. If not, he
would be heavily fined.

On the whole, Louis Favre’s contract
included an extreme number of terms and
conditions, but that did not scare him. Favre
had faith in technological advances such as
new, efficient drills and Alfred Nobel’s new
invention: dynamite.
Two Swiss villages were
selected to be the starting
points of the St. Gotthard tunnel:
Italian-speaking Airolo south of
the Alps and Göschenen to the
north of the mountain range. The
decision was a rude awakening
for the two small communities,
as lots of workers and equipment
were suddenly arriving.
Unemployment was high in
Italy, and reports of well-paid
tunnel worker jobs attracted
thousands of people. Of the up
to 3,400 workers, who were
working hard to build the tunnel, 94 % were
Italian, whereas only 2 % came from
relatively richer Switzerland.
Before the work could begin, engineers
had to make accurate measurements of the
impassable mountains, through which the
tunnel would pass. In only 32 days, they

Goods 1888 1900
Food 181,352 t 373,852 t
Building materials 72,409 t 205,648 t

Total quantity 660,241 t 978,016 t

TRANSPORT OF GOODS ROCKETED
The St. Gotthard railway was not only a popular short cut
for European tourists, who needed to cross the Alps.
During the years after it opened, the quantity of goods
carried through the tunnel increased considerably.

TECHNOLOGY TUNNELS
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