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…
There could be an underwater tunnel linking Europe and Africa by 2030
Eurostar, you have competitionLiv Kelly (Time Out)
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Sarah Brown
in reply to Sarah Brown • •@Zoë O'Connell My mistake. 25 km of empty land alongside a motorway.
SO HARD
Alda Vigdís 🇵🇸 🇱🇧
in reply to Sarah Brown • • •Jon Worth
in reply to Alda Vigdís 🇵🇸 🇱🇧 • • •Jon Worth
in reply to Sarah Brown • • •Sarah Brown
in reply to Jon Worth • •Jon Worth
in reply to Sarah Brown • • •Sarah Brown
Unknown parent • •Sarah Brown
Unknown parent • •@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.
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Sion [main]
in reply to Sarah Brown • • •Sarah Brown
in reply to Sion [main] • •Richard Gadsden
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.