NZR Tunnels
INTRODUCTION
Tunnels and railways are to many people synonymous in that the early railway design philosophy in England called for near-level railways to reduce the load on the engines. In contrast, they then also introduced the 'inclined plane', it being the other extreme, where by railway wagons were hauled up steep grades by rope in order to reach a different level of railway. These too were often through tunnels.
New Zealand being a very young country when railways were first introduced had to tackle the issue of mountains from the very start. The options were to go round them or through them, and the engineers of the day usually took the middle ground, bu climbing up as far as practical and then piercing the ridge with a tunnel. The tunnel to Lyttelton, completed in 1863 was built very much along traditional English designs but the options of creating a shorter tunnel by climbing higher were extremely constrained due to the location of the port. Its construction proved what could be done on the other side of the world.
The Dunedin and Port Chalmers Railway (1872) was much more conservative in its approach to obstacles it could not climb over or go round. Two short tunnels met their needs but one of those has since been replaced by a much longer tunnel on a much better alignment. That is typical of much of New Zealand, the need for a tunnel will often result in a difficult track alignment up to the the tunnel making significant improvements to the alignment very expensive. North of Dunedin the mainline climbs over a significant hill with virtually continuous curves for some 15km. Along the way there were four tunnels the longest one 1.3km is currently the most restrictive tunnels on the KiwiRail network having been constructed in 1874. Several times investigations have looked at alternative routes, but even with halving the track distance and eliminating all the steep grades, it was not economic as it required a new 7 - 8km long tunnel. Similar cases would exist throughout the country with an emphasis on eliminating tunnels wherever possible due to their loading gauge constraints and challenging work environments. Recent legislation (following the Pyke River coal mine disaster) has required KiwiRail to adopt work-practices designed for mines, when working in tunnels greatly increasing the cost of all types of tunnel work.
From a peak of 130 tunnels, KiwiRail still has 100 tunnels on its network, though a significant number are on mothballed lines. The following tables give a summary of all tunnels constructed on railway lines operated by the Government railways at some point in its life. This is an interim way of presenting this dataprior to getting it all working through the Cargo database. The tables are arranged with the Line name as part of the page headings so individual Lines can be accessed more easily. They can be selected from the 'Table of Contents' at the top of the page.
Most tunnels received names, many just their location, but a good number had far more creative names, with their true origins long lost as time has gone by. There is plenty of scope to debate these origins in the discussion pages associated with each tunnels home page.
The data for the tunnel tables is currently being collated and will be added here progressively from 11/06/2024