Kilsby Tunnel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Air shaft in the Kilsby Tunnel, illustrated in an 1852 railway publication.
Enlarge
Air shaft in the Kilsby Tunnel, illustrated in an 1852 railway publication.

The Kilsby Tunnel is a railway tunnel on the West Coast Main Line railway in England. It was designed and engineered by Robert Stephenson.

The tunnel is located near the village of Kilsby in Northamptonshire roughly 5 miles (8 km) southeast of Rugby. The tunnel is 2,432 yards (2,223 metres) long.

The tunnel was opened in 1838 as a part of the London and Birmingham Railway. It is today the 18th longest tunnel on the British railway system.

The tunnel took far longer, and cost far more money to build than had been anticipated. This was because the tunnel builders encountered unexpected quicksand which trial borings into the hill had not revealed. The excess water from the quicksand had to be pumped out, a process which took several years.

The length of time it took to build the tunnel delayed the opening of the London and Birmingham Railway.

It took three years, and cost £320,000 to build — three times the original estimate (£23,758,000 in 2005 pounds).[1]

[edit] External link

  • Kilsby Tunnel includes the classic image of the tunnel under construction.

[edit] References

  1. ^ According to Table 1 of http://www.parliament.uk/commons/lib/research/rp2006/rp06-009.pdf, the RPI index in 1838 was 10.2 and had risen to 757.3 in 2005, giving a conversion factor of 74.245.
    (An estimate of today's cost, using machines but no fatalities, would be interesting.)