The Homer Tunnel is a 1.2 km (0.75 miles) long road tunnel in the Fiordland region of the South Island of New Zealand, opened in 1953. New Zealand State Highway 94 passes through the tunnel, linking Milford Sound to Te Anau and Queenstown, by piercing the Darran Mountains at the Homer Saddle. Until it was sealed and enlarged it was the longest gravel-surfaced tunnel in the world.
History
William H. Homer and George Barber discovered the Homer Saddle on 27 January 1889. Homer suggested that a tunnel through the saddle would provide access to the Milford area. The tunnel and the associated Milford Road were built by relief workers during the Depression, initially just starting with five men using picks and wheelbarrows. The men had to live in tents in a mountainous area where there might be no direct sunlight for half of the year. At least three were killed by avalanches over the coming decades.
Progress was slow, with difficult conditions including fractures in the rock bringing water from snow melt into the tunnel. Compressors and a powerhouse in the nearby river were eventually built to pump out 40,000 litres of water per hour. Work was also interrupted by World War II (though the actual piercing of the mountain had successfully been achieved in 1940), and an avalanche in 1945 which destroyed the eastern tunnel portal. These problems delayed the tunnel's completion and opening until 1953. As a result of this incident a satellite phone and fire extinguishers were installed in the tunnel.
Two tourist buses were destroyed by fire outside the tunnel in January and March 2008, though the fires were not related to the tunnel.
Roof lighting was fitted and traffic lights reintroduced in 2004 to reduce capacity constraints and safety issues. Although the tunnel is large enough for a bus and a smaller vehicle to pass, meetings involving two coaches or campervans are problematic. This is alleviated by the fact that the traffic is very tidal, towards Milford Sound in the morning and toward Te Anau in the afternoon. The traffic lights operate only during the day during the peak summer season, since the avalanche risk makes it unsafe to stop and queue at the portals in winter and spring. With increasing traffic on the road, it is expected that the risk to vehicles waiting at the portal will also increase.
In 2020 widening was not in scope when the New Zealand Government announced $25 million in funding for tunnel safety improvements through its rejuvenation package and the works were commenced, expecting to be completed by 2023. However in 2021 it was reported that budget constraints meant that the upgrades would need to be scaled back.
Other proposals have been made to bypass the Homer tunnel entirely to reduce the journey time from Queenstown, including a Milford Dart tunnel, which was declined in 2013.
See also
- Transport in Milford Sound
References
External links
- Photograph above the tunnel, and map
