Arlberg Schnellstraße

The Arlberg Schnellstraße (S16) is an expressway (Schnellstraße) in Austria that is part of the E 60. It runs along a length of 62.2 km between Zams and Bludenz and connects the Inn Valley Autobahn (A12) in Tyrol with the Rheintal/Walgau Autobahn (A14) in Vorarlberg. The border between the two states is located in the Arlberg Tunnel (toll), which is 13,972 m long and is also the longest road tunnel in Austria. Overall, more than half of the route runs in long tunnels.

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Expressway S16
Arlberg Schnellstraße S16
Arlberg Schnellstraße
Route information
Part of E60
Length62.2 km (38.6 mi)
Major junctions
From A 12 in Zams
To A 14 in Bludenz
Location
CountryAustria
RegionsTyrol, Vorarlberg
Highway system
  • Highways of Austria

History

After the section from Bludenz to Braz opened from 1969 to 1972, the Arlberg Tunnel, opened in December 1978, was the next completed part. Further construction took place over a number of years. Only in 2006 was the last gap closed with the Strenger Tunnel.

Opening timeline

Date Section Length

(km)

17. Nov. 1969 HASt Braz West – ASt Bludenz-Montafon 05.288
1972 ASt Braz Ost - HASt Braz West 02.649
1. Dez. 1978 ASt St. Anton - ASt Langen (Arlbergtunnel) 16.053
16. Dez. 1979 Danöfen - HASt Dalaas 07.154
16. Dez. 1979 HASt Flirsch - ASt St. Anton 08.689
29. Jan. 1983 Zams - ASt Landeck West 04.131
5. July 1984 ASt Zams - Zams 00.984
22. Nov. 1991 ASt Langen - Danöfen 04.093
29. June 1994 ASt Landeck West - ASt Pians 03.276
24. June 1997 HASt Dalaas - ASt Braz Ost 03.395
7. Nov. 2005 Danöfen – Dalaas (second carriageway) 04.500
2. June 2006 ASt Pians – HASt Flirsch 06.493

Cross-section of the road

Dalaas exit

In the course of the Arlberg Schnellstraße, the cross-section of the road is often changing. While on the eastern tunnel approach, with the exception of the Zammer- and Perjentunnels, the entire route is carried out at least with a 2 + 1 traffic route (three lanes with alternating passing lanes), a large part of the western approach is only two lanes with an overtaking prohibition. However, since the speed limit of 80 km/h and the overtaking prohibition are frequently ignored in this area, serious accidents occur again and again. This makes the S 16 one of the most accident-rich roads in Austria and is therefore often locally referred to as the "death route." The ASFINAG therefore sent a dowser to "suppress" this area, since there are allegedly "earth rays" and "fields of force stones", which would supposedly lead to sudden blood pressure drops and microsleep in drivers. However, the effectiveness of this measure is controversial.[1][2]

Lanes in detail

  • Zams/A12 – Zammer Tunnel – Perjentunnel – Landeck-West: 1+1
  • Landeck-West – Tunnel Pians-Quadratsch – Strenger Tunnel – Flirsch: 2+2
  • Flirsch – Tunnel Flirsch-Gondebach – Tunnel Pettneu/Ostportal: 2+1
  • Tunnel Pettneu/Ostportal – St. Anton: 2+2
  • St. Anton – Arlbergtunnel – Langen: 1+1
  • Langen – Langener Tunnel – Dalaaser Tunnel/Ostportal: 2+2
  • Dalaaser Tunnel/Ostportal – Bludenz/A14: 1+1
    (east of Bings: shortly 2+1)

Expansion projects

The Perjentunnel will receive a second tube by 2018, after which the existing tube will be renovated by 2020. The route between the Perjentunnel and Zams is to be expanded to four lanes by 2025, so that the eastern approach will only have less than four lanes in the area between Flirsch and Pettneu. A four-lane expansion of the western approach, as planned in the meantime, was canceled due to low traffic load.

Before the completion of individual sections of the Arlberg Schnellstraße, today's Landesstraßen running parallel to the S 16 were designated as Arlberg Ersatzstraße B 316.

Bibliography

  • Bernd Kreuzer: Der Bau der Autobahnen und Schnellstraßen in Österreich. In: Das Autobahnnetz in Österreich. 30 Jahre ASFINAG. Wien 2012, S. 11–120. (PDF; 7,6 MB)
  • Herbert Gehrer: Der Ausbau der Straßen Vorarlbergs für den motorisierten Verkehr von den 30er Jahren bis 1983. Amt der Vorarlberger Landesregierung, Bregenz 1986.

References

  1. "Beruf Strassenprediger". Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  2. "Die Pendelprofis der Asfinag". derStandard.at. 2008-01-22. Retrieved 2018-01-29.
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