Home
About MITA

    Overview
    History
    MITA Board
    Contact
    MITA Locator Map
    Join MITA
    Project Profiles
 
Search
search by keyword(s)

Member Advantages
Legislative Representation
Have your voice heard as a member in politics. more>>
Become a Member

 
 
    < View other projects
 
Official Project Name: Detroit Windsor Tunnel
Rank: #3

Official Project Name: Detroit-Windsor Tunnel

Owner: Detroit & Canada Tunnel Corporation and Windsor Tunnel Commission

Web Site: www.dwtunnel.com

Owner’s Key Contact: Donald Vuchetich

Key Contact’s Phone: (313) 567-4422 x 202

Key Contact’s Fax: (313) 567-2565

Key Contact’s E-Mail: dvuchetich@dwtunnel.com

Project’s Principal Engineer or Firm: Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Quade & Douglas

Originally Constructed: 1928

Project Operational: 1930

Original Construction Cost: $23,000,000

Date of Major Updates: 1950 (Detroit Plaza renovated); 1976 (automatic toll system); 1993 (computerized toll system); 1995 (Windsor Plaza renovated)

Principal Original Contractor: Parklap Construction (Parsons, Brinckerhoff, Quade & Douglas)

Description:

The Detroit Windsor-Tunnel opened in 1930 and was the first underwater tunnel to connect two countries. It was also the first long vehicular tunnel constructed by the sunken tube method anywhere in the world. Travelers previously made the one-mile trip between Detroit and Windsor via ferry. Traffic lines and tie-ups were common on either side of the Detroit River in the mid-1920s as the number of people seeking passage increased steadily after the introduction of the automobile. Tunnel construction techniques included immersed tube, shield-driven and cut-and-cover. For the immersed tube segment, nine steel tubes, each weighing about 800,000 pounds make up the tunnel under the river. Built on dry land, they were launched like ships, floated into position, and sunk in a trench dredged in the bottom of the river. The steel tubes were welded in place and the overall error in alignment was less than one inch. The total length of the Tunnel from street grade to street grade is 5,845 feet. A 22-foot-roadway with 13.5 feet of headroom is provided throughout the tunnel, which lies 75 feet under the Detroit River’s surface. About 1,000 vehicles per hour in each direction use the tunnel.