The Meseș Tunnel (Romanian: Tunelul Meseș) is a future automotive tunnel located near Zalău, in Sălaj County, Crișana, Romania, which is planned be part of the route of the A3 Transylvania Motorway, specifically the Poarta Sălajului - Zalău segment (subsection 3B3) (12,9 km). It is named after the Meseș Mountains (Romanian: Munții Meseș), the mountain range belonging to the Apuseni Mountains, which forms part of the Carpathians. When completed, it will be the longest road tunnel in Romania, being 2.89 kilometres (1.80 mi) long,[1]

Meseș Tunnel
Overview
LocationSălaj County, Crișana, Romania
Coordinates47°08′36″N 23°04′49″E / 47.1431991°N 23.0803316°E / 47.1431991; 23.0803316
Route A3 Motorway
CrossesMeseș Mountains
StartCiumărna
EndZalău
Technical
Length2.89 km (1.80 mi)[1]
No. of lanes4

Design edit

The Meseș Tunnel is one of the largest structures along the route of the Transylvania Motorway, the other one being the partially built Suplacu de Barcău Viaduct over the accumulation lake located at Suplacu de Barcău, Bihor County. As part of a controlled-access highway, it will have two galleries, make use of immersed tube construction techniques and is planned to have two lanes per direction (4 in total) and sidewalks, but will not have an emergency lane (hard shoulder).[2]

History edit

Feasibility studies edit

The original feasibility study for the Transylvania Motorway involved excavations 42 meters deep and 120 meters wide near Zalău. Originally, the motorway section which presently includes the Meseș Tunnel, was scheduled to be built by the American company Bechtel as part of the Transylvania Motorway (A3) that would connect Brașov to the Hungarian border and further to Central and Western Europe via Târgu Mureș, Cluj-Napoca and Zalău (entirely 415 km), as the contract was awarded in 2004 to the company by the Romanian government, then led by Adrian Năstase, with the deadline in 8 years.[3]

The contract with the American company was terminated in 2013, with only around 50 km completed.[3] Two years later, the National Company of Motorways and National Roads of Romania (CNADNR) signed in April 2015 a contract with Tecnic Consulting Engineering Romania for a new feasibility study for a tunnel in the same area, at the price of 1 million lei for a period of 12 months. The auction for the feasibility study was launched in 2014,[2] with the aim to avoid the excavation works in the same area that were decided in 2004.

In June 2017, the route of the tunnel was established. With a length of 2.89 km (1.80 mi), it would exceed the length of the 884 m long Capra-Bâlea tunnel on the Transfăgărășan (DN7C), back then the longest tunnel by length in Romania, built in 1972 during the communist regime, thus becoming the new longest tunnel.[2]

In July 2020, after over 5 years since the contract for the feasibility study was signed, the Romanian Ministry of Transport announced that it began preparations for beginning the expropriations necessary for the construction of the Meseș tunnel, and that the auction for the subsections 3B3 and 3B4 of the A3 motorway would be launched by 30 July 2020.[4] During this phase, the CNAIR/CNADNR applied multiple penalties on the company working on the feasibility study due to the massive delays, in total worth 278.000 lei.[2]

Auction edit

4 months after the first announcement, the auction for the Poarta Sălajului - Zalău segment (subsection 3B3) of the A3 motorway containing the Meseș tunnel, which also included the Zalău - Nușfalău segment (subsection 3B4), totalling about 41,0 km, was announced in November 2020, with a cost of approximatively 800 million euros or 4 billion lei (excluding VAT). The contract involved projecting of the motorway section, a phase which would take 12 months to complete, followed by construction for another 36 months. Due to the high difficulty of the road section, the auction was with pre-qualification.[5]

The then-Minister of Transport, Lucian Bode, stated in the auction announcement that Sălaj's inhabitants should know that, in the condition that the builder will follow the deadline, all segments of the motorway located inside the Sălaj County will be available for use in "late 2024" or "early 2025".[5]

The NGO Asociația Pro Infrastructură stated in late November 2020 that it found a series of negative aspects in the documentation, from which includes the fact that only 6 drillings were made in the area of the tunnel's portals, among with other problems.[6]

As of early 2022, the auction for the subsection 3B3 is still ongoing, with the contract for the project and construction works yet to be signed.[7]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Cel mai lung tunel din România. Unde se va face și când va fi lansată licitația". Digi24 (in Romanian). Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  2. ^ a b c d "Cel mai lung tunel de autostradă din România, în aer după 3 ani de chinuri ale facerii. Statul, și fără studiu de fezabilitate și dat în judecată". Economica.net (in Romanian). Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  3. ^ a b "Liber spre Europa! Chiar dacă are numai 5 kilometri, mica porțiune Biharia-Borș leagă Bihorul la rețeaua europeană de autostrăzi (FOTO)". eBihoreanul (in Romanian). Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  4. ^ "Cel mai lung tunel de autostradă din România: Guvernul pregătește exproprieri pentru Tunelul Meseș de pe Autostrada Transilvania". Economica.net (in Romanian). Retrieved 24 April 2021.
  5. ^ a b "Autostrada Transilvania: CNAIR scoate la licitație contract de 800 milioane euro pentru 41 de km, inclusiv Tunelul Meseș". Economica.net (in Romanian). Retrieved 22 March 2021.
  6. ^ "Cel mai lung tunel din România, "mort" din fașă? Noi probleme pe Autostrada Transilvania". Monitorul de Cluj (in Romanian). Retrieved 12 June 2021.
  7. ^ "Autostrada Transilvania mai așteaptă. Lucrările sunt blocate! Acuzații pentru ministrul Grindeanu". Fanatik.ro (in Romanian). 18 January 2022. Retrieved 18 March 2022.