Hell Tunnel Explained

Hell Tunnel
Helltunnelen
Location:Trøndelag, Norway
Coordinates:63.4271°N 10.8425°W
Route:/
Status:In use
Start:Hommelvik, Malvik
End:Hell, Stjørdal
Opened:18 October 1995
Traffic:Automotive

The Hell Tunnel (Norwegian: Helltunnelen) is a 3928m (12,887feet) long road tunnel in Trøndelag county, Norway. The tunnel is located along the shared section of the European route E6 and European route E14 motorways that runs through the mountain Gjevingåsen between the villages of Hommelvik in Malvik municipality and Hell in Stjørdal municipality.

The tunnel was opened on 18 October 1995 and is the longest of the four tunnels between Trondheim and Stjørdal. It used to have a toll plaza on the southeast side of the tunnel, but now it is all automated, just as with several other tunnels in Norway. The tunnel was built as part of the Trondheim Toll Scheme.[1]

Name

The name of the tunnel comes from the nearby village of Hell. In the Norwegian language, neither the name of the village nor the tunnel has anything to do with the Christian concept of hell. In fact, in Norwegian, the word "hell" means "luck".

Notes and References

  1. Book: Road Tunnels in Norway. Road Tunnels in Norway > 3 000 m. Merzagora. Eugenio A.. Lotsberg. Gunnar. 2011-03-09.