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Me, in southern Portugal: you seen that Spain and Morocco are contemplating a rail tunnel?

@Zoë O'Connell, also in southern Portugal: But they won’t build a rail line to here? WHY EVEN IS SPAIN?

Me: That would be HARD, Zoe. They’d have to build a rail line over at least THREE KILOMETRES of line across land nobody lives on and construct a bridge of about TWO HUNDRED METRES.

So difficult.

timeout.com/news/there-could-b…

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in reply to Sarah Brown

well there used to be a railway line all the way to Ayamonte. But the Huelva - Ayamonte section got torn up in the 1980s…
in reply to Jon Worth

@Jon Worth Also there’s the Guadiana in the way which is hundreds of centimetres deep.
in reply to Sarah Brown

the EU funds the ferry across it. That’s damned slow. But does take bikes. What are you complaining about? 🤔
Unknown parent

Sarah Brown
@João Tiago Rebelo @Zoë O'Connell That explains a lot about the state of the road surface on the A49.
Unknown parent

Sarah Brown

@João Tiago Rebelo @Zoë O'Connell Also, were a bridge to be constructed, it would face the insurmountable engineering challenge of water that is thousands upon thousands of millimetres deep.

So there’s that.

in reply to Sarah Brown

What gauge do you have there? (I know this is one of the reasons why trans-Pyrenean connections are problematic)
in reply to Sarah Brown

Spanish railways were originally built to six (Castilian) feet. Portuguese ones to five (Portuguese) feet. These are, however, only 8mm different - Portugal being 1664mm, Spain 1672mm.

When the two networks joined up (1880s), they agreed a compromise "Iberian" gauge of 1668mm, and gradually all track was switch to that, which was officially completed in 1955.

So yeah, they already fixed *that* problem 70 years go.