René Konen Tunnel

The entry of the tunnel.

The René Konen Tunnel (French: Tunnel René Konen), colloquially known as the Saint Esprit Tunnel (French: Tunnel du St-Esprit, Luxembourgish: Helleg-Geescht-Tunnel), is a 655 m (2,149 ft)[1] road tunnel in Luxembourg City in southern Luxembourg. It carries two lanes of one-way traffic northwards, under Ville Haute, bypassing the narrow streets and pedestrian zone in the heart of the city.

At the southern end (49°36′29″N 6°07′59″E / 49.60816°N 6.13294°E / 49.60816; 6.13294 (southern end of René Konen Tunnel)Coordinates: 49°36′29″N 6°07′59″E / 49.60816°N 6.13294°E / 49.60816; 6.13294 (southern end of René Konen Tunnel)), the tunnel is fed by the Passerelle, which carries traffic from Gare, on the southern side of the Pétrusse valley. The tunnel's entrance is under the Judiciary City. At 100 metres (330 ft), the tunnel bears to its right, passes under the Chambre des Députés (49°36′38″N 6°07′59″E / 49.61066°N 6.13300°E / 49.61066; 6.13300 (middle of René Konen Tunnel)) and heads back to the left in a long, sweeping bend. At its northern end (49°36′49″N 6°07′55″E / 49.61363°N 6.13197°E / 49.61363; 6.13197 (northern end of René Konen Tunnel)), the tunnel emerges just to the west of the Alzette valley. The road onto which it leads then divides into two, feeding the Boulevard Royal to the west and the Côte d'Eich to the north.

On November 5, 1998, it was officially named after René Konen, a member of the Democratic Party, who served from 1979 until 1984 as Minister for Public Works in the Pierre Werner cabinet, and who initiated the tunnel's construction.

Footnotes

  1. Marteling, Luc (19 December 2006). "Luxemburgische Tunnels: Über dem Standard" (PDF) (in German). d'Wort. Retrieved 2007-01-01.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.