Cycling underwater. Tyne Pedestrian and Cyclist Tunnels

07 Aug, 2019
Twitter Facebook LinkedIn
The historical Tyne Pedestrian and Cyclist Tunnels near Newcastle in England have been reopened after 6-years long refurbishment. The 3.7 m wide cycling tunnel can be counted among the best cycle paths in the UK, reports Carlton Reid, in his contribution to the cycling underwater mini-series.

The 275-meter twin-tube tunnel is buried 12 meters beneath the River Tyne between Jarrow (43,000 inhabitants) and Howdon (part of Wallsend, also 43,000 inhabitants), 8 km east from the centre of Newcastle, in the northeast of England. It was opened in 1951, sixteen years before the Tyne Tunnel for motor vehicles. At its peak, soon after opening, 20,000 users rode or walked through the tunnels each day.

Pedestrians and cyclists have their own tunnels. The cyclists’ part of the Tyne Pedestrian and Cycle Tunnels is 3.7 meters wide, while pedestrians have 3.2 m at their disposal.

Unlike the Tyne Tunnel for motorists, access to the cyclist and pedestrian tunnels has always been free. The nearby Shields ferry is not free. The Tyne Pedestrian and Cycle Tunnels were built at the location of a second ferry over the Tyne, which went out of business soon after the tunnels opened.

Originally the tunnels linked shipyards on both sides of the Tyne. The shipyards are long gone, and the tunnels will likely never again cater to 20,000 users a day, but cyclists and pedestrians cannot use the motorist-only Tyne Tunnel and there’s no bridge nearby, so the route is a critical one for active mobility in the Tyneside conurbation.

The tunnels were closed for refurbishment in 2013 and re-opened only recently, in August 2019. The refurbishment included removing asbestos from the tunnel and replacing part of the wooden escalators with inclined glass lifts. The steep escalators were not the most convenient to use, but the lifts will have a more limited capacity – each lift will accommodate only six cyclists and their bicycles at a time.

It is worth noting that during restoration works pedestrians and cyclists were transported under the Tyne by a free shuttle bus service.

As a part of the refurbishment, 3,630 paving flagstones have been lifted and re-laid, with 1,978 new ones replacing those cracked by years of use.

Rotunda-style entrance building to the Tyne Pedestrian and Cyclist Tunnels at Howdon.

Both the cyclist and pedestrian tunnels mark the location of the old border between counties. However, the tunnels are now in Tyne and Wear, metropolitan county created in 1974.

See also:

http://www.tynepedestrianandcyclisttunnels.co.uk/

https://www.forbes.com/sites/carltonreid/2019/03/21/historic-and-wonderful-cyclist-and-pedestrian-tunnel-under-river-tyne-re-opens-soon/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YoA6CcL4uRM

Regions: 

News category: 

Contact the author

Aleksander Buczynski's picture
Senior Policy Officer – Infrastructure

Contact Us

Avenue des Arts, 7-8
Postal address: Rue de la Charité, 22 
1210 Brussels, Belgium

Phone: +32 2 329 03 80