60°20′51.068″N 5°17′37.086″E / 60.34751889°N 5.29363500°E
Fyllingsdaltunellen (the Fyllingsdal tunnel) is a 2900 meter long tunnel through Løvstakken for pedestrians and cyclists between Fyllingsdalen and Minde in Bergen, Norway. The tunnel opened in spring 2023 and is the world's longest cycling tunnel.[1] It runs parallel to the light rail tunnel through the same mountain, and also functions as an escape tunnel for the light rail.[2]
Design
editThe width of the road is 6 meters. 3.5 meters is a cycle lane with white asphalt,[3] 2.5 meters is a walking lane for pedestrians, and there are also road shoulders. The lanes are separated from each other, with separate bicycle lanes for each direction, and the pedestrian lane slightly raised.
The tunnel walls are made of slanted concrete blocks to dampen reverberation and echoes.
Gallery
edit-
Tunnel opening at Minde
Credit: Znuddel -
Information sign at the tunnel opening
Credit: Znuddel -
Information sign at the tunnel opening
Credit: Znuddel -
From the tunnel
Credit: Znuddel -
From the tunnel
Credit: Znuddel -
From the tunnel
Credit: Znuddel -
From the tunnel
Credit: Znuddel
Security
editThe tunnel is camera monitored, and has emergency lights and telephones. Cellphone coverage and emergency network has been established, as well as access for emergency vehicles.[4]
References
edit- ^ "Verdens lengste gang - og sykkeltunnel: Slik bli den nye "lysløypen" gjennom Løvstakken". Bybanen utbygging. 2021-08-30.
- ^ "Bli med gjennom den nye bybanetunnelen" (in Norwegian Bokmål). 2021-08-04. Retrieved 2023-10-01.
- ^ "NCC tester ut lys asfalt" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2023-02-04.
- ^ "Spørsmål og svar om sykkeltunnelen". Retrieved 2023-09-28.