Lehigh Tunnel
Overview | |
---|---|
Location | Lehigh County and Carbon County, Pennsylvania |
Coordinates | 40°46′44″N 75°39′08″W / 40.7789°N 75.6523°W |
Route | I-476 / Penna Turnpike NE Extension |
Crosses | Blue Mountain |
Operation | |
Work begun | February 14, 1989[1] |
Opened | November 9, 1991[1] |
Operator | The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission[2] |
Traffic | Automotive |
Character | Road |
Technical | |
Length | 4,380 feet (1,340 m)[1] |
No. of lanes | 4[1] |
Operating speed | 55 mph (89 km/h)[3] |
The Lehigh Tunnel is a pair of road tunnels that carries the Pennsylvania Turnpike Northeast Extension (Interstate 476) under Blue Mountain north from U.S. Route 22 in the Lehigh Valley to the Scranton/Wilkes-Barre area between mileposts 70.7 to 71.5.
Description
Originally a single tunnel that opened to traffic in 1957, it was called the Lehigh Tunnel to avoid confusion with the existing Blue Mountain Tunnel on the mainline.[4] The tunnel was twinned in 1991 to allow two lanes of traffic in each direction. It has an unusual appearance, as the original (northbound) tunnel is rectangular, as it used the older dig-and-blast technique, while the new tube is oval, having been constructed using the New Austrian tunnelling method.
From 1980 to 1996, the Northeast Extension was designated as Pennsylvania Route 9, as opposing traffic faced each other in the single tube prior to the opening of the current southbound tube, and therefore did not qualify for Interstate highway status, which was granted five years after the completion of the southbound tube.[5]
The Lehigh Tunnel crosses the border between Lehigh County and Carbon County. It is the only road tunnel crossed by the Appalachian Trail.
Accidents
Howard M. Sexton, a 70-year-old truck driver from New Jersey, was killed in the southbound Lehigh Tunnel on February 21, 2018 when an electrical conduit broke free from the tunnel's ceiling and fell through the windshield of his truck, striking him in the head.[6] In a preliminary report issued on May 1, 2018, the National Transportation Safety Board revealed that a 10-foot-long section of conduit fell into the path of Sexton's truck after the steel support system for the conduits, which were suspended from the apex of the tunnel arch directly over the travel lanes, failed. The tunnel had last been inspected in 2016, at which time an inspector found evidence of corrosion on several of the steel support straps.[7]
References
- ^ a b c d "Through Seven Decades: A Brief History of the PA Turnpike". The Pennsylvania Turnpike. The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Archived from the original on October 30, 2012. Retrieved March 16, 2013.
- ^ "Homepage". The Pennsylvania Turnpike. The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission. Retrieved March 16, 2013.
- ^ "Commission OKs raising turnpike speed limit (road watch)". Delaware County Daily Times. April 17, 2005.
- ^ "Pennsylvania Turnpike". pahighways.com. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
- ^ PA Highways.com page about the history of PA 9 Retrieved January 23, 2011
- ^ "A deadly accident in the Lehigh Tunnel, once the capstone to the Pennsylvania Turnpike". lehighvalleylive.com. Retrieved February 24, 2018.
- ^ "Preliminary Report Highway: HWY18FH006" (PDF). National Transportation Safety Board. Retrieved May 1, 2018.
External links
40°46′44″N 75°39′08″W / 40.7789°N 75.6523°W
- Toll tunnels in Pennsylvania
- Transportation buildings and structures in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania
- Transportation buildings and structures in Carbon County, Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission
- Interstate 76 (Ohio–New Jersey)
- Road tunnels in Pennsylvania
- Pennsylvania road stubs
- Carbon County, Pennsylvania, geography stubs
- Pennsylvania geography stubs
- American tunnel stubs