Jondal Tunnel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

LocationVestland, Norway
Coordinates60°11′43″N 6°15′01″E / 60.1953°N 6.2502°E / 60.1953; 6.2502
StatusIn use
Route Fv49
Jondal Tunnel
Map of the tunnel
Interactive map of Jondal Tunnel
Overview
LocationVestland, Norway
Coordinates60°11′43″N 6°15′01″E / 60.1953°N 6.2502°E / 60.1953; 6.2502
StatusIn use
Route Fv49
StartTorsnes, Ullensvang Municipality
EndNordrepollen, Kvinnherad Municipality
Operation
Work begunOctober 2009
Opened7 September 2012
OperatorNorwegian Public Roads Administration
Traffic685 AADT[1]
CharacterAutomotive
Technical
Length10,400 metres (6.5 mi)
No. of lanes2
Tunnel clearance4.6 metres (15 ft)

The Jondal Tunnel (Norwegian: Jondalstunnelen) is a road tunnel in the Hardanger region of Vestland county, Norway. The tunnel is part of County Road 49 and it lies in Kvinnherad Municipality and Ullensvang Municipality. The 10.4-kilometre (6.5 mi) long tunnel was built to offer a better route between the cities of Bergen and Oslo. Cars can drive from Bergen to Tørvikbygda, then take a ferry to Jondal, then go through this tunnel, then a short drive to the Folgefonna Tunnel before getting to the town of Odda. From there it is a short drive on the narrow National Road 13 to the European route E134 highway which leads to Oslo.[2]

Work on the tunnel began in October 2009. The tunnel was opened on 7 September 2012 by Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg. The project cost almost 806.6 million kr. For the first 6 years of its use (until 2018), there was a toll for using the tunnel: 100 kr for small vehicles and 200 kr for large vehicles.[3] This was reduced in 2018 and on 8 June 2020 the toll was removed.[4]

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