Kennedytunnel
The Kennedytunnel is an important road, rail, and bicycle tunnel to the south of Antwerp, Belgium, under the Scheldt river. The road tunnel forms a part of Highway R1 – the not yet completed inner ring motorway surrounding the city. Opened to road traffic on 31 May 1969, and to rail traffic on 1 February 1970, the tunnel was named after John F. Kennedy, the thirty-fifth President of the United States.
![]() Daily, more than 250,000 vehicles drive through the Kennedy Tunnel.  | |
| Overview | |
|---|---|
| Location | Antwerp | 
| Status | In use | 
| Route | R1 ring road (Belgium) | 
| Operation | |
| Opened | 1969 | 
| Traffic | cars, trains, bicycles | 
| Toll | no | 
| Technical | |
| Length | 590 m | 
| Width | 14.25 m | 
| Route map | |
Plans for the construction of the tunnel date back to the Fifties. Between 1945 and 1960, the volume of traffic passing through the Waaslandtunnel had quintupled – in excess of 38,000 vehicles were travelling through the tunnel per day. Because of the resulting daily congestion on both sides of the river crossing, the construction of a second crossing was deemed necessary.
In 1958 the layout for the E3 was established, and an invitation to tender was issued for a bridge or a tunnel. In 1963, Minister Georges Bohy, following the advice of his technical experts, decided in favour of a tunnel.
In effect, the Kennedytunnel consists of four parallel tunnels. Two road tunnels, 14.25 m wide, each sufficient for three lanes of traffic, run on either side of a 4 m wide bicycle tunnel. Fifteen metres below sea level there is a rail tunnel 10.5 m wide.
The road tunnel was the scene of a particularly severe fatal traffic accident in October 2006,[1] after which traffic speed was restricted to 70 km/h during working hours, rather than the higher 100 km/h limit applicable on the rest of the Antwerp Inner Ring Road. Additional metal crash barriers had been installed in the tunnel the previous year.[2]
See also
    
    
References
    
- "2 doden en 4 zwaargewonden bij ongeval in Kennedytunnel".
 - "Antwerp port mobility". Archived from the original on 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2010-07-24.
 
