Northbrae Tunnel

The Northbrae Tunnel, also referred to as the Solano Avenue Tunnel, was built as a commuter electric railroad tunnel in the northern part of Berkeley, California, and was later converted to street use.

Northbrae Tunnel
Overview
LocationBerkeley / Alameda County, California, US
RouteEast Bay Electric Lines;
Key System;
Solano Avenue
Operation
Constructedcut-and-cover
OpenedRailroad: 1912; Street: 1963
ClosedRailroad: April 20, 1958
Technical
Length465 feet (142 m)
No. of tracks2 tracks until 1958
No. of lanes2 lanes, Solano Avenue after 1963
Track gauge4 ft 8 12 in (1,435 mm) standard gauge
ElectrifiedEBEL, 1200 V DC overhead
KS, 600 V DC overhead, after 1941
Route map

In 1910 the Southern Pacific Railroad (SP) was electrifying its steam-engine drawn ferry-train line (to San Francisco) from Oakland Pier via Shattuck Avenue to Vine Street in Berkeley and extending it north along the base of the Berkeley Hills to newly developing neighborhoods of Berkeley at Northbrae and Thousand Oaks. The route chosen was Henry Street and Sutter Street to its intersection with Hopkins. At this point a ridge carrying Marin and Los Angeles Avenues blocked the way. After investigating (1) a route around the ridge and (2) a cut through the ridge with bridges over it, it was decided to use the route of the cut but make it a tunnel instead, under Marin and Los Angeles Avenues just west of their intersection with The (Marin) Circle. The cut-and-cover method of tunnel construction was used.[1] The excess soil was used to elevate the railroad right-of-way adjacent to Henry Street so that a bridge could be put in over Eunice Street and the right-of-way would go over a culvert containing Codornices Creek.[2] The tunnel curved to the west so that the railroad could continue through a small canyon to the intersection of Solano Avenue and The Alameda and then to Thousand Oaks station at Solano and Colusa Avenues.[3][4]

The railroad was completed in 1911 and inspection trains were run at the end of that year, with service beginning January 1, 1912.

The SP ferry-train service was changed to bridge-train service operated by its subsidiary, Interurban Electric Railway (IER) across the San Francisco Oakland Bay Bridge in December, 1939. The IER ended service July 26, 1941,[5] but the tracks in Berkeley were made available to the Key System, which extended service to Hopkins and Sutter Streets (the stop formerly called Northbrae) beginning August 6, 1941. Service was extended through the tunnel to a new terminal at Solano Avenue and the Alameda on December 6, 1942.[6] All bridge-train service ended on April 20, 1958.[7]

A paved roadway was installed in the tunnel by the City of Berkeley, and was opened to traffic on December 15, 1962,[8] extending Solano Avenue through the tunnel to connect with Sutter Street.

References

  1. San Francisco Call, June 10, 1910, p.8
  2. "Tunnel is a surviving reminder of Solano Avenue's railroad heritage", El Cerrito Journal November 3, 1988, p.8
  3. Guppy
  4. Ford, pp. 118-122
  5. Ford, p. 278
  6. Demoro, p. 104
  7. Demoro, pp. 135-140
  8. California Highways and Public Works, March-April 1963, pp.61-64
  • Ford, Robert S. (1977). Red Trains in the East Bay: The History of the Southern Pacific Transbay Train and Ferry System. Interurbans Specials. 65. Glendale, California: Interurbans Publications. ISBN 0-916374-27-0.
  • Demoro, Harre W. (1985). The Key Route: Transbay Commuting by Train and Ferry, Part 1. Interurbans Specials. 95. Glendale, California: Interurban Press. ISBN 0-916374-66-1.
  • Guppy, R. T. (September 13, 1912). "Electrification of Oakland Suburban Lines. Development of Southern Pacific Passenger Lines in the Residential Districts on the East Shore of San Francisco Bay". Railway Age Gazette. 53 (11): 460–463.

See also

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.