Singha Malai Tunnel Explained

Singha Malai Tunnel
Official Name:Tunnel No. 14
Other Name:Poolbank Tunnel
Location:Hatton, Sri Lanka
Coordinates:6.898°N 80.6045°W
Status:Open
Route:Main Line
Start:Hatton
End:Kotagala
Owner:Sri Lanka Railways
Traffic:rail
Engineer:Guilford Lindsey Molesworth
Construction:F. W. Faviell
Length:562m (1,844feet)
Hielevation:1,291 m
Width:5.5m (18feet)

Singha Malai Tunnel or Poolbank Tunnel is the second longest railway tunnel in Sri Lanka.[1] [2] [3]

There are 46 tunnels along the Main Line between Colombo and Badulla. The longest tunnel is the Poolbank tunnel between Hatton and Kotagala, which is 562m (1,844feet) long,[4] 5.5m (18feet) wide[5] and has a curvature in the middle so that one end of the tunnel cannot be seen from the other.[6] It was the longest railway tunnel in the county until the construction of Kakunadura tunnel at Nakuttiyagama, as part of the project to extend the railway line from Matara to Beliatta.In the middle of the tunnel the gradient begins to decline, as the Kotagala railway station is approximately 23m (75feet) lower than the Hatton railway station.[7]

The tunnel was designed by Sir Guilford Lindsey Molesworth, the first Director-General of Railways in Ceylon (1865-1871) and constructed by F. W. Faviell.[3] The tunnel's construction represented a significant engineering feat at the time, as it was bored from both ends meeting in the middle.[8] The tunnel was named the Poolbank tunnel as it runs under the Poolbank tea estate, which was established in 1880.[9] It is also called Singha Malai tunnel, after a nearby rock formation, Singha is Tamil for 'Lion' and Malai for 'Mountain'.

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Ceylon Railway: The Story of Its Inception and Progress. Perera, G. F. . 1925. The Ceylon Observer. 518.
  2. News: It happened 146 years ago: Cutting the first sod of earth for the Railway. Aryadasa. Ratnasinghe. Daily News. 3 August 2004. 7 September 2017.
  3. News: A historic journey in 1864. Aryadasa. Ratnasinghe. Sunday Times. 3 January 1999. 7 September 2017.
  4. Book: Ceylon in the Jubilee Year. Ferguson, John. Asian Educational Services. 1887. 299.
  5. News: Through tunnels and rocks on the main line. Aryadasa. Ratnasinghe. Sunday Times. 11 September 2017.
  6. News: Tale of the “Yakada Yaka”. Daily FT. D. C.. Ranatunga. 1 October 2010. 7 September 2017.
  7. Book: The Ceylon Government Railway: A Descriptive and Illustrated Guide. Cave, Henry W.. 1910. Cassell & Co. Ltd. 132.
  8. News: Train to Badulla. Aryadasa. Ratnasinghe. Sunday Times. 13 June 1999. 7 September 2017.
  9. Web site: Poolbank. The History of Ceylon Tea. Dilmah Ceylon Tea Company PLC. 7 September 2017.