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Eastern Harbour Crossing

Coordinates:22°17′58.15″N114°13′51.97″E / 22.2994861°N 114.2311028°E /22.2994861; 114.2311028
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tunnel crossing Victoria Harbour, Hong Kong

Eastern Harbour Crossing
Entrance to Eastern Harbour Crossing at Cha Kwo Ling in July 2008
Overview
LocationBeneathVictoria Harbour, betweenQuarry Bay andLam Tin (nearCha Kwo Ling)
Coordinates22°17′58.15″N114°13′51.97″E / 22.2994861°N 114.2311028°E /22.2994861; 114.2311028
StatusActive
SystemPart ofRoute 2
StartQuarry Bay
EndLam Tin (nearCha Kwo Ling)
Operation
Opened21 September 1989; 35 years ago (1989-09-21)[1]
OwnerHong Kong Government (Road Tunnel)
MTR Corporation (Superficies and Track Tunnel)
OperatorPacific Infrastructure Limited[2]
TrafficVehicular andRail
Characterimmersed tube
Vehicles per day71471 (2022)
Technical
Line length2.29 kilometres (1.42 mi)
No. oftracks2 tracks (1 per direction) in train tunnel
No. oflanes4 lanes (2 lanes per direction) in road tunnel with 6 lanes (3 lanes per direction) on exit
Track gauge1,432 mm (4 ft 8+38 in)
Operating speed70 kilometres per hour (43 mph) (within road tunnel)
50 kilometres per hour (31 mph) (exit and entrance to road tunnel)
Map
Eastern Harbour Crossing
Part ofRoute 2
Major junctions
West endQuarry Bay
Major intersections2 in total;
Route 4 atQuarry Bay
East endLam Tin (nearCha Kwo Ling)
Location
CountryChina
Special administrative regionHong Kong
Major citiesKwun Tong,Quarry Bay
Highway system
Eastern Harbour Crossing
Traditional Chinese東區海底隧道
Simplified Chinese东区海底隧道
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinDōngqū Hǎidǐ Suìdào
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationDūngkēui Hóidái Seuihdouh
Jyutpingdung1 keoi1 hoi2 dai2 seoi6 dou6

TheEastern Harbour Crossing (Chinese:東區海底隧道), abbreviated as "EHC" (Chinese:東隧) is a combined road-rail tunnel that crosses beneathVictoria Harbour inHong Kong. Opened on 21 September 1989, it is the second harbour-crossing tunnel built and the longest amongst the three. It connectsQuarry Bay onHong Kong Island andCha Kwo Ling inKowloon East.

History

[edit]
Kowloon Entrance to the Eastern Harbour Crossing

Initially, theGovernment of Hong Kong had plans to build a bridge across the eastern portion of the harbour but due to fears of the bridge blocking planes landing atKai Tak airport, this was shelved in favour of a tunnel.[3]

In 1986, theNew Hong Kong Tunnel Company Limited won the bidding for this contract, and was given the right to run the road tunnel on a 30-year franchisee, and the train tunnel on an 18-years-and-6 months franchisee counting from the first rail operating date.[4] Construction started on 25 September 1986, and was commissioned on 21 September 1989, four months earlier than the original planned finishing date. The first person to cross the tunnel was the then-Governor of Hong KongSir David Wilson.[5]

Opening Plaque unveiled by the Prince of Wales Charles in 1989

The tunnel was officially opened by the thenPrince of Wales Charles on the 8th of November of the same year during his andPrincess of Wales Diana's Royal Tour toHong Kong.[5]

In February 2008, the 18-years-and-6 months franchise for the train tunnel expired and was transferred to the government. The government continued leasing the tunnel to theMTR Corporation until 2013, when it was acquired by the MTR Corporation for only HK$1,000, a deal made in the 2000 when the MTR Corporation was undergoing its partial privatisation process.[6]

On 7 August 2016, the 30-year franchisee for the road tunnel expired and the ownership was transferred to the government. TheEastern Harbour Crossing Ordinance was repealed alongside the franchisee's expiry and is instead replaced by theRoad Tunnels (Government) Ordinance as the tunnel is now owned by the government.[4]Pacific Infrastructure Limited was granted a new contract to continue operating the tunnel.

On 27 August 2023, the HKeToll was implemented for the Eastern Harbour Crossing. The toll plaza on the Kowloon side was subsequently demolished gradually.

Tunnel Composition

[edit]

The tunnel consists of two components, the road part and the rail part:

Usage

[edit]

The Eastern Harbour Crossing is the second most-used tunnel in Hong Kong.

YearTotal TrafficAverage Daily Traffic
202226,087,02171,471
202128,988,80279,421
202026,376,84472,068
201928,823,26478,968
201828,485,60578,043
201728,173,74777,188
201627,730,54175,767
201527,546,06575,469
201426,657,69973,035
201326,317,79672,104
201225,883,54870,720
201125,374,79069,520
201024,648,28967,530
200922,990,19562,987
200823,137,61963,218
200723,361,92164,005
200622,268,74361,010
200523,310,70163,865
200426,893,04973,478
200326,018,77271,284
200226,789,59973,396
200127,227,36074,596
200026,435,43572,228
199925,116,70368,813
199825,914,64170,999
199731,321,42785,812
199632,256,92288,134
199531,530,82886,386
199431,778,70187,065
199329,192,00379,978
199224,983,73768,262
199117,794,63048,752
199011,733,83732,147
19892,326,49323,035

Tunnel Tolls

[edit]

Tolls are collected by HKeToll in both directions on both sides.[7]

Current Tolls

[edit]
CategoryVehicle TypeTolls
1Motor cycles & motor tricyclesHK$8-16[note 1]
2Private carsHK$20-40[note 2]
3TaxisHK$25
4Public and Private light busesHK$50
5Light goods vehicles[note 3]
6Medium goods vehicles[note 4]
7Heavy goods vehicles[note 5]
8Public and Private Single-decked buses[note 6]
9Public and Private Double-decked buses[note 7]
10Each additional axle in excess of twoFree

Historical Tolls

[edit]
CategoryVehicle Type21 September 1989
to
31 December 1997
1 January 1998
to
30 April 2005
1 May 2005
to
16 February 2019

[8]

17 February 2019
to
1 August 2023

[9]

2 August 2023
to
27 August 2023

(4am)

27 August 2023
(5am)
to
17 December 2023
(5am)

[10]

From
17 December 2023
(5am)

[11]

1Motor cycles & motor tricyclesHK$5HK$8HK$13HK$8-16[note 8]
2Private carsHK$10HK$15HK$25HK$30HK$20-40[note 9]
3TaxisHK$25[note 10]HK$25
4Public and Private light busesHK$15HK$23HK$38HK$50
5Light goods vehicles[note 11]
6Medium goods vehicles[note 12]HK$20HK$30HK$50
7Heavy goods vehicles[note 13]HK$30HK$45HK$75HK$50
8Single-decked busesNon-franchisedHK$20HK$30HK$50HK$50
FranchisedFree
9Double-decked busesNon-franchisedHK$30HK$45HK$75HK$75HK$50
FranchisedFree
10Each additional axle in excess of twoFranchised busesHK$10HK$15HK$25FreeFree
Other VehiclesHK$25

Interchanges

[edit]
Eastern Harbour Crossing
Westbound exitsExit numberEastbound exits
End of Route 2
intersects withIsland Eastern Corridor
EndEastern Harbour CrossingStartEastern Harbour Crossing
Tai Koo Shing,Sai Wan Ho,Shau Kei Wan,Chai Wan,Siu Sai Wan, Stanley, Shek O
Island Eastern Corridor
1Ano exit
Quarry Bay,North Point,Causeway Bay, Happy Valley, Aberdeen
Island Eastern Corridor
1Bno exit
no exit1CTseung Kwan O, Lam Tin Interchange
Tseung Lam Highway
Eastern Harbour Crossing
StartEastern Harbour CrossingEndEastern Harbour Crossing
continues asLei Yue Mun Road

Transport

[edit]
Main article:List of bus routes in Hong Kong § Eastern Harbour Crossing

As of 2018[update], there are 46 bus routes passing through the tunnel.

Controversies

[edit]

In June 2005, CITIC decided to raise the toll for using Eastern Harbour Crossing from HK$15 to HK$25 for private vehicles and up to 67% for other classes of vehicles, under the fare adjustment mechanism derived from the build-operate-transfer (BOT) model.[12] This increase aroused criticisms that the model was detrimental to the public interest, with the increase shifting more traffic to the already congestedCross-Harbour Tunnel.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Toll-varying
  2. ^Toll-varying
  3. ^Including special purpose vehicles of a permitted gross vehicle weight not exceeding 5.5 tonnes
  4. ^Including special purpose vehicles (other than an articulated vehicle) of a permitted gross vehicle weight exceeding 5.5 tonnes but not exceeding 24 tonnes
  5. ^Including special purpose vehicle (other than an articulated vehicle) of a permitted gross vehicle weight exceeding 24 tonnes
  6. ^Toll fees are exempted for franchaised buses
  7. ^Toll fees are exempted for franchaised buses
  8. ^Toll-varying
  9. ^Toll-varying
  10. ^HK$15 for non-passenger carrying taxis using manual toll
  11. ^Including special purpose vehicles of a permitted gross vehicle weight not exceeding 5.5 tonnes
  12. ^Including special purpose vehicles (other than an articulated vehicle) of a permitted gross vehicle weight exceeding 5.5 tonnes but not exceeding 24 tonnes
  13. ^Including special purpose vehicle (other than an articulated vehicle) of a permitted gross vehicle weight exceeding 24 tonnes

See also

[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related toEastern Harbour Tunnel.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Transport in Hong Kong – Tunnels and Bridges". Transport Department of theGovernment of Hong Kong. Archived fromthe original on 10 March 2021. Retrieved29 October 2012.
  2. ^. Transport Department of theGovernment of Hong Konghttps://www.td.gov.hk/filemanager/en/content_5010/contact_tunnels_control_areas_operators_revised.pdf.Archived(PDF) from the original on 16 May 2024. Retrieved1 August 2024.{{cite web}}:Missing or empty|title= (help)
  3. ^"Connecting HK Island to Kowloon 1961 report proposing a bridge or tunnel? – The Industrial History of Hong Kong Group".industrialhistoryhk.org. Retrieved2 August 2024.
  4. ^ab"Hong Kong e-Legislation".www.elegislation.gov.hk. Retrieved2 August 2024.
  5. ^ab"東網光影:89年東隧通車 專營權去年屆滿".on.cc東網 (in Chinese (Hong Kong)). 3 September 2017. Retrieved2 August 2024.
  6. ^"值15億東隧鐵路贈港鐵 - 東方日報".orientaldaily.on.cc. Retrieved2 August 2024.
  7. ^"Hong Kong's Eastern Harbour Tunnel set for new HKeToll system on Sunday". 24 August 2023.
  8. ^"Toll Rates of Road Tunnels and Lantau Link".Transport Department. Archived fromthe original on 11 January 2013. Retrieved1 August 2024.
  9. ^"Toll Rates of Road Tunnels".Transport Department. Archived fromthe original on 3 August 2021. Retrieved1 August 2024.
  10. ^"Toll Rates of Road Tunnels".Transport Department. Archived fromthe original on 21 November 2023. Retrieved1 August 2024.
  11. ^"Time-varying Toll Plans Summary Table"(PDF).Transport Department.Archived(PDF) from the original on 15 April 2024. Retrieved1 August 2024.
  12. ^Ng, Dennis (4 May 2005)."Toll hike ignites call for government to take control".The Standard. Archived fromthe original on 16 October 2007. Retrieved27 October 2006.

External links

[edit]
Preceded by
Southern Terminus
Hong Kong Route 2

Eastern Harbour Crossing
Succeeded by
Lei Yue Mun Road
OnHong Kong Island
Crossings of
Victoria Harbour
InKowloon andNew Kowloon
BetweenNew Kowloon and
theNew Territories
In theNew Territories
α. ^ab Entirely in the New Territories, but all access roads on one side pass through New Kowloon.
Italics indicate that a tunnel is under construction.
Tunnel crossings of theVictoria Harbour
Route 2
Fixed crossings
Rambler Channel
Ferry operators
Reclamations
Geography
Typhoon shelters
Conservation
Sea terminals
Piers
Current
Former
Other topics
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