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Eastern Harbour Crossing

 
Wikipedia: Eastern Harbour Crossing
Eastern Harbour Crossing
Eastern Harbour Tunnel.jpg
Entrance to Eastern Harbour Crossing at Cha Kwo Ling
Traditional Chinese 東區海底隧道
Simplified Chinese 东区海底隧道

The Eastern Harbour Crossing, abbreviated as "EHC" (東隧), is a tunnel in Hong Kong. It is a combined road and MTR rail link under Victoria Harbour between Quarry Bay in Hong Kong Island and Cha Kwo Ling in Kowloon.

Contents

History

The Hong Kong Government negotiated with several consortia to adopt the Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) model in planning new tunnels in different parts of the city.

In 1986, the government gave New Hong Kong Tunnel the right to run the Tunnel on a 30-year franchise with lease expiring in August 2016. The tunnel features two components, a road part and a rail part:

The powerful Chinese investment group CITIC Pacific is interested in both parts, controlling the road part (71% stake) and has a 50% stake in the rail part. CITIC also controls 50% of the Western Harbour Tunnel Company.

Traffic

According to the operator, in 2003, a total number of 26,018,772 vehicles used the Eastern Harbour Tunnel. The average daily throughput was 71,284.

There are many cross-harbour bus routes that travel through the Eastern Harbour Crossing, operated by Kowloon Motor Bus, New World First Bus and Citybus.

Detailed bus routes

Controversies

In June 2005, CITIC decided to raise the toll for using Eastern Harbour Crossing from HK$15 to HK$25 for private vehicles and up to 67% for other classes of vehicles, under the fare adjustment mechanism derived from the build-operate-transfer (BOT) model.[1]

The Government of Hong Kong claimed it was powerless to block the toll increase under the BOT model. This has aroused criticisms that the model was detrimental to the public interest, shifting more traffic to the already congested Cross-Harbour Tunnel.

References

  1. ^ Ng, Dennis (2005-05-04). "Toll hike ignites call for government to take control". The Standard. http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?pp_cat=&art_id=7381&sid=&con_type=1&d_str=20050504&sear_year=2005. Retrieved 2006-10-27. 

See also

External links

Eastern Harbour Crossing
Hong Kong Route 2 Chronology
HK Route2.svg
Preceded by
Southern Terminus
Eastern Harbour Crossing Succeeded by
Lei Yue Mun Road


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Eastern Harbour Crossing" Read more