

"Throughout this century, throughout the most difficult tests, the joining of French elan and British practicality has been marvellous," Queen Elizabeth II said in French at a ceremony in the French town of Coquelles on to inaugurate the tunnel.

Then, on Decemat precisely 12:12 pm, workers from each side drilled through the final wall of rock separating their respective tunnels and joined up.Īn AFP photograph shows the two helmeted men, each holding their national flags, making contact through the opening in the blue-black chalk.Ĭonstruction wrapped up in December 1993, the six years of work claiming the lives of nine workers, seven of them British. It was a plan for a double undersea rail tunnel that got the final nod and the "Eurotunnel" was confirmed in a Franco-British agreement signed at Canterbury in February 1986.Įurope's biggest construction site involved up to 15,000 people with about 4,100 workers on the French side and nearly double the number in Britain.ĪFP stories tracked the tunnel's progress, a rate of "500 metres a month", as well as the delays, strikes and technical problems - and, eventually, a countdown of the final kilometres. Most Britons followed Thatcher's preference for a road link while the French were keener on the rail option. Work got under way in 1973 and some 300 metres were dug out on the French side at Sangatte and 400 metres near Dover on the British side.īut two years later Britain's then prime minister Harold Wilson halted construction for budgetary reasons.Īfter Margaret Thatcher took power in Britain in 1979 and Mitterrand in France two years later, the project to cross the Channel gained new impetus.Ī group of Franco-British experts presented four options: a rail-road bridge a rail-road bridge-tunnel a rail-road tunnel or a rail tunnel.

Around a decade later the two governments took the decision to build. In 1957 the Channel Tunnel Study Group was formed to research the project. The project would be revived 75 years and two world wars later.

Britain - apparently wary of risks to its national defence - cited "strategic reasons". Nearly two kilometres were drilled between 18, when work was halted. British mine owner and engineer William Low solved the tricky question of ventilation. In 1855 a proposal by Frenchman Aime Thome de Gamond won the approval of Queen Victoria and Napoleon III: a train in a bored rail tunnel. It was a feat of engineering that cost billions of euros but was beset by delays, challenges and surprises.Īlready in 1802 French mining engineer Albert Mathieu-Favier had submitted to Napoleon Bonaparte a plan for a tunnel under the English Channel to be used by horse-drawn carriages.Ī hundred or so other projects were hatched over the 19th century as an alternative to the sea crossing, including bridges and underground tubes. On Queen Elizabeth II and President Francois Mitterrand boarded the royal Rolls-Royce and took an undersea train to Britain - a 50.5-kilometre (30-mile) trip that inaugurated a tunnel two centuries in the making.įollowed by their spouses in a Citroen, their journey 100 metres (330 feet) underwater officially opened a route that has since been used by 430 million travellers and handles a quarter of the goods moved between Britain and Europe.
