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This list is intended to give an overview of the main Alpine tunnels. As the list is "country" oriented, cross-border tunnels are listed twice (e.g. the Mont Blanc tunnel is listed under France and under Italy.)
The following are the main paved road passes across the Alps. Main indicates on the main chain of the Alps, from south west to east.Passes on subsidiary ranges are listed where the ridge leaves the main chain – N/W indicates north or west of the main chain, S/E on the south or east side.
Pages in category "Tunnels in the Alps" The following 38 pages are in this category, out of 38 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
railway tunnel St. Gotthard: Uri/Ticino: Göschenen UR - Airolo TI: 1882: 1141 railway tunnel Vereina Tunnel: Grisons: Klosters - Susch: 1999: 1430 railway tunnel with car transport Vue des Alpes: Neuchâtel: Neuchâtel - La Chaux-de-Fonds 1040 railway tunnel Weissenstein: Solothurn: Oberdorf - Gänsbrunnen: 1908: 732 railway tunnel Wolfgang ...
The following articles contain lists of tunnels: List of tunnels by location; List of longest tunnels; List of long tunnels by type; See also Category: ...
The Mont Blanc tunnel, used by more than 1.7 million vehicles last year, will close on Sept. 4 for 15 weeks, raising concern over its impact on Italy's economy, including tourism and exports.
Alpine Tunnel: 11,523 feet (3,512 m) Alpine Tunnel, first tunnel over Continental Divide in Colorado, highest railroad tunnel and at 1,772 ft (540 m) longest narrow-gauge tunnel in North America. Tunnel abandoned since 1910, impassable, unpaved road on approaches, reconstructed telegraph office with station platform near southern (wester
Important Alpine tunnels (Italian: trafori; sg.: traforo) are identified by the capital letter "T" followed by a single digit number. Currently there are only three T-classified tunnels: Mont Blanc Tunnel (T1), Great St Bernard Tunnel (T2) and Frejus Road Tunnel (T4).