Why Sweden Gambled $4BN on a Super-Deep Tunnel

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  • čas pƙidĂĄn 21. 05. 2024
  • Stockholm is in a race to fix it's traffic congestion. But will this really work?
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Komentáƙe • 729

  • @TheB1M
    @TheB1M  Pƙed 28 dny +22

    👉 To try everything Brilliant has to offer for free for a full 30 days, visit brilliant.org/TheB1M or click on the link in the description. You’ll also get 20% off an annual premium subscription.

    • @_Mackan
      @_Mackan Pƙed 28 dny +1

      no lol

    • @e2U
      @e2U Pƙed 25 dny

      Reality roll by design...haha

  • @zenvoidd
    @zenvoidd Pƙed 28 dny +1205

    "More lanes have been added but it's not enough" yeah bro just one more lane bro we'll fix it bro one more lane

    • @fdssd1736
      @fdssd1736 Pƙed 28 dny +61

      Volvo has bought most swedish politicians

    • @filip9564
      @filip9564 Pƙed 28 dny +97

      They changed from 2 lanes to 3
      Not some crazy texas thing were they ha e like 8

    • @filip9564
      @filip9564 Pƙed 28 dny

      @@fdssd1736volvo is owned by china and no they have not

    • @maddog2314
      @maddog2314 Pƙed 28 dny +61

      Yep, all I could think about was induced demand.

    • @SomeKidFromBritain
      @SomeKidFromBritain Pƙed 28 dny +37

      You get to a safe and functional number of lanes then you stop.
      Usually this is 2-3

  • @zeytelaloi
    @zeytelaloi Pƙed 28 dny +625

    The problem isn't congestion in Stockholm per-se among its inhabitants; introducing more public transport would help with that. The problem is that Stockholm, as is mentioned, is built on a number of islands, between the MĂ€laren lake and the Baltic Sea, the former of which serves as ~150 km wide barrier. As a result, Stockholm serves as the only land bridge along the east coast.
    In addition to the inhabitants of Stockholm, there is a lot of traffic that needs to go from other parts of Sweden north and south of Stockholm. Because there are massive waterways they need to pass through the city, and there are currently essentially only two proper highways. One goes through the very center of the city - past the historical old town - and the other, Essingeleden, passes slightly to the west of it. (There are two smaller bridges but those are really just intended for city busses, vans, few passenger cars, bicyclists, etc - not long-haul trucks carrying containers)
    We've had incidents in the past where a long-haul truck crashed and blocked several lanes of traffic on the Essingeleden and it was catastrophic for not just the city's inhabitants but all other logistics passing through the city.
    The Stockholm bypass is meant to offer one additional route bypassing the center completely. While some Stockholmers might use it to cut their driving commute travels, and it will off-load the highways in the center, in practice the really big beneficiaries will be long-haul truck drivers.

    • @fernbedek6302
      @fernbedek6302 Pƙed 28 dny +27

      If you get fewer people in Stockholm on the existing roads with public transit that would open up more road capacity for long distance transport. Or, if you really need to bypass the city entirely (say, when transporting hazardous goods or something) then rail is better for long distance cargo and build a rail tunnel.

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 Pƙed 28 dny +78

      I think this is something a lot of commenters are missing, too many people have this knee-jerk anti-car response whenever there is any new road construction. It's same idea for the road tunnel in Antwerp, route lorries around the city (in that case to get to the docks). Even if it doesn't help with congestion that much, fewer lorries in urban areas that don't need to be there is always a good thing for both air quality and safety.

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 Pƙed 28 dny +31

      @@fernbedek6302 Sweden is fairly sparsely populated outside of a few major cities, the rail network isn't extensive enough and mills and factories are too spread out to make a large amount of rail freight economic.

    • @fernbedek6302
      @fernbedek6302 Pƙed 28 dny +16

      @@Croz89 I'm Canadian. We're even more sparsely populated. We're still able to make rail the main way we move freight. If anything, low densities are good for freight rail because there's less stopping and starting and more benefit from saving on driver-hours over the long distances you're having to transport things.

    • @Croz89
      @Croz89 Pƙed 28 dny +25

      @@fernbedek6302 Canada has the US freight rail network to connect to, plus it has ports on both coasts and a lot of low value bulk goods to move. Sweden's railway doesn't really connect much to much outside Sweden, only Copenhagen via the Oresund and a couple of connections to Norway (Finland is a break of gauge). Sweden's rail network isn't much less extensive really, it's just more passenger focused.
      Unless you're dealing with containers off ships, higher value lower volume goods are generally going to be moved by road, it just doesn't make sense to build a railway spur to every factory, mill or refinery, or even a loading station in the local area.

  • @Crabman_87
    @Crabman_87 Pƙed 28 dny +614

    Who the hell provided that b-roll at 6:15 ?!? 💀

    • @daricora
      @daricora Pƙed 28 dny +145

      "Fill up your car like someone that has never pumped gas before"

    • @kinfongyeung5400
      @kinfongyeung5400 Pƙed 28 dny +56

      @@daricora must be someone from new jersey

    • @tsint
      @tsint Pƙed 28 dny +23

      Gas is nowadays so cheap in Sweden so we can afford this ;)

    • @curtis545454
      @curtis545454 Pƙed 28 dny +5

      I don't even need to check, I know exactly what happens then

    • @hughmcaloon6506
      @hughmcaloon6506 Pƙed 28 dny +16

      Derek Zoolander!

  • @Josephoz99
    @Josephoz99 Pƙed 28 dny +253

    FYI this is not only about congestion. The focus is to mainly shift away throughrunning traffic from the city center and also to reduce vulnerability of the road system in Stockholm.

    • @dataandcolours6284
      @dataandcolours6284 Pƙed 7 dny

      Exactly and what is why this is such a bad solution. This ring will both be extremely expensive but not actually solve the problem as the ring is simply to close to Stockholm. There is typically often congestion all the way from SödertÀlje in south on the E4 and also congestion north of Sollentuna. This ring road will not fix that at all. It amazes me that the politician doesn't realize that a huge part of the problem is through-traffic that have no destination or departure anywhere close to Stockholm. Significantly updating road 55 had made so much more sense and be a more economically sound investment.

    • @Idkwhothisiss8
      @Idkwhothisiss8 Pƙed 4 dny

      @@dataandcolours6284Fast Àr det verkligen sÄ mycket trafik redan frÄn SödertÀlje? Det brukar börja i höjd med Botkyrka (sÄvida inte nÄgot trafikhinder uppstÄr) om man ska norr ut, sÄ pÄ sÄ vis Àr den ju rÀtt sÄ bra planerad

  • @plaveccz3180
    @plaveccz3180 Pƙed 28 dny +104

    Damn, I didnt expect to see this here. I spent 5 years working on this project on one of the sections. We had about 4 kilometers of main tunnels + all small connection tunnels and ramps, which added up to about 20 kilometers of tunnel. It was very interesting work.

    • @RevitExperiments
      @RevitExperiments Pƙed 6 dny

      I worked on it in 2020 for 6 months. Quite interesting, but things were still moving slowly Honestly I have some doubts it's gonna be finished by 2030, but let's see.

  • @katherinebrubaker7788
    @katherinebrubaker7788 Pƙed 28 dny +94

    2:44 Fred: This enormous project isn't built in a day
    Me: *he's going to talk about the sponsor*

  • @philipbengtsson2186
    @philipbengtsson2186 Pƙed 28 dny +153

    The IKEA highway, connecting the two stores north and south of the city.

    • @ebx100
      @ebx100 Pƙed 28 dny +13

      Damn, I'm suddenly craving meatballs.

    • @Sevenfold120
      @Sevenfold120 Pƙed 28 dny +6

      I bet that was taken in consideration when they started this.

    • @elldmdnz
      @elldmdnz Pƙed 28 dny

      shut up

    • @jonevansauthor
      @jonevansauthor Pƙed 28 dny +9

      Everyone knows what you really need for Ikea is a highway through the shop itself so you can go straight to the thing you need to see and not all the way around it. :D

    • @lars-akechesburg9911
      @lars-akechesburg9911 Pƙed 28 dny +8

      Funny thing is that the bypass startpoint is next to the biggest IKEA in the world

  • @leonkernan
    @leonkernan Pƙed 28 dny +249

    6:14 Someone teach that guy how to use a petrol pump!!!

    • @ebx100
      @ebx100 Pƙed 28 dny +1

      The petrol pumps are green in the Philippines as well. Practically shit in my pants every time I fill up my motorbike!

    • @ebx100
      @ebx100 Pƙed 28 dny +4

      And I don't try to spill half of my weekly 4 liters all over the pavement, either!

    • @jonevansauthor
      @jonevansauthor Pƙed 28 dny

      Yes, he should be imprisoned for our safety. Sheesh.

    • @Timeyy
      @Timeyy Pƙed 28 dny +7

      Bro spilled like 5€ worth of gas for no reason lmao

    • @dancostello6465
      @dancostello6465 Pƙed 28 dny

      He dunno he a Swedish #borg #borg #borg

  • @reddimus11
    @reddimus11 Pƙed 28 dny +49

    It would be cool for you to look back at some of your older episodes and check back on the status of those construction projects today!

  • @axelliljencrantz4462
    @axelliljencrantz4462 Pƙed 28 dny +32

    All the stock footage was actually of Stockholm, the description of the project as well as the history of traffic in Stockholm was accurate. Impressive!

    • @GackFinder
      @GackFinder Pƙed 12 dny +1

      That's true, even the stock footage at 6:14 is from Sweden, I know because I'm the guy in the video.

    • @eliaslundstedt5607
      @eliaslundstedt5607 Pƙed 11 dny

      @@GackFinder LÀr dig tanka för i helvete

  • @tobias_dahlberg
    @tobias_dahlberg Pƙed 28 dny +30

    Seeing a lot of weird takes from people who presumably do not understand the situation. A bypass is needed. The E4 is one of if not the most trafficked highway in Sweden, running along the entire country and going through Stockholm. There are countless journeys being taken going north or south and they all have to pass THROUGH the capital on the current E4. A bypass can divert all those cars and semi-trucks so that the traffic that you see in the city is basically only city traffic, no one just passing through. If you're going from Sundsvall to Jönköping, why would you need to drive through the capital and add to the traffic there?. It's like if every journey going along the east coast of the United States HAD to go through Washington D.C

    • @dataandcolours6284
      @dataandcolours6284 Pƙed 7 dny +2

      @tobias_dahlberg Exactly. It would have made so much more sense to simply spend all this insane amount of money on updating road 55 Norrköping-Katrineholm-StrÀngnÀs-Enköping-Uppsala. It's such a no brainer for people NOT living in or close to Stockholm. The insane amount traffic that is forced do drive through or close to Stockholm unnecessary seems to have been completely forgotten.
      And it's not like this rather short ring road will fix that. A lot of the congestion starts close to Nyköping even in the south-east and there are often congestion significantly further north than Sollentuna. This project will not fix that at all, but probably even increase it even more as fewer will consider road 55 when this project is completed as now at least they will not drive more or less into Stockholm.

  • @johan8008
    @johan8008 Pƙed 28 dny +50

    Passing by my hometown.. We been waiting long rime for this tunnel..

  • @isaks7042
    @isaks7042 Pƙed 28 dny +178

    To everyone who are against this project saying this is "just another lane". You are wrong. This isnt Houston where they increase to infinite lanes. This project is to divert the traffic from the city center. There is no reason for a highway to cut right through city centers like in stupid american cities. European cities have less traffic because our highways tend to be build around our cities, not straight through. This is exactly what this project is about.

    • @UnbeltedSundew
      @UnbeltedSundew Pƙed 28 dny +35

      You know that almost every major American city has an interstate ring road to by pass it, right?

    • @isaks7042
      @isaks7042 Pƙed 28 dny +31

      @@UnbeltedSundew I checked the map and yeah you are right. However, there are also often hundreds of meters wide roads in the middle of the cities aswell. For example, Road 70 runs right through Columbus and Indianapolis, Kansas City, city centers.

    • @elldmdnz
      @elldmdnz Pƙed 28 dny +7

      this ones underground so that works. underground highways better than lots of lanes above ground.

    • @MrGunnar69
      @MrGunnar69 Pƙed 28 dny +8

      @@isaks7042 Like the E4 that goes straight through Stockholm, is Stockholm an American city?

    • @victorcapel2755
      @victorcapel2755 Pƙed 28 dny +32

      @@MrGunnar69 The E4 was built in the 60s, inspired by the US model. That's exactly what the city is now trying to rectify. Everyone agrees that it was a stupid idea, but they thought otherwise back then.

  • @yannisstath
    @yannisstath Pƙed 28 dny +78

    buckle up everyone. B1M is here

  • @thomash5342
    @thomash5342 Pƙed 28 dny +28

    Besides this project they are also building out the metro network a lot. What I still don’t understand is with so much tunneling being done that the whole klarastrandsleden to centralbron is not being tunneled. Mind boggling how a major road like that can just pass through the middle of the city.

    • @pcongre
      @pcongre Pƙed 27 dny +1

      hopefully it will be closed to private motor traffic instead

    • @magnushultgrenhtc
      @magnushultgrenhtc Pƙed 27 dny +6

      Mind boggling not just passing right through the city centre, but doing it on some of the most phenomenal plots of land available.

    • @counterfit5
      @counterfit5 Pƙed 26 dny +2

      ​@@magnushultgrenhtc*United States intensifies*

    • @magnushultgrenhtc
      @magnushultgrenhtc Pƙed 26 dny

      @@counterfit5 like/dislike

    • @kriselt
      @kriselt Pƙed 25 dny

      Damn, imagine having a Walmart supercenter there! But at least we got a highway❀

  • @PWDino
    @PWDino Pƙed 27 dny +4

    I have been waiting a long time for this video! As it's such a big project i Thought it would pop up here sooner or later. And i'm not disappointed by it either!
    Would be cool if you made a video about the extension of the subway system in stockholm as well as they are building the deepest subway station in the world as well as having had some big chalanges of a very different kind to what you normaly hear about!

  • @addvurtbikes
    @addvurtbikes Pƙed 28 dny +65

    The tunnel goes from where I live to where my grandmother lives. She's 85. It won't be completed before we both pass away from old age. I'm 34.

    • @jake9764
      @jake9764 Pƙed 28 dny +4

      I do love me generational infrastructure projects, however I’m not sure why this is for vehicles only and not trains.

    • @richardconway6425
      @richardconway6425 Pƙed 28 dny +2

      cut down on your smoking. At least you'll be healthy, even if the tunnel isn't done.

    • @squidlet6125
      @squidlet6125 Pƙed 6 dny

      @@jake9764 probably too sharp elevation changes. Trains need to have very gradual elevation changes to operate (except for like Swiss alpine trains). Therefor trains would probably need their own separate project.

  • @lipen99
    @lipen99 Pƙed 12 dny +4

    We have a tunnel going through HallandsÄsen that cost around 11,9BN to build

    • @rulta
      @rulta Pƙed 10 dny +1

      That's in kronor not dollars

  • @EyesOfByes
    @EyesOfByes Pƙed 28 dny +18

    So, when are you gonna cover the rail tunnel project VÀstlÀnken in Gothenburg? It would be a really good case study on contruction project controversy.

    • @martyminus90
      @martyminus90 Pƙed 28 dny +1

      I also want to watch that. Love from Norway

    • @henrybn14ar
      @henrybn14ar Pƙed 13 dny

      A worthless project driven by clueless politicians. Gravy train for consultants and contractors, just like the British HS2.

  • @acadr12
    @acadr12 Pƙed 27 dny +4

    I worked on this scheme over 10 years ago as a strutural engineer through GGJV (Grontmij / Golders) and it was fun... one thing about the Swedes that i remember was regular meetings to plan the next series of meetings, all within a multi-disciplinary design envirnment... lol

    • @Fender-bender
      @Fender-bender Pƙed 15 dny +1

      I heard that a few of those who plan the meetings actually like them!

  • @57thorns
    @57thorns Pƙed 12 dny +1

    There is another bypass route as well, much longer but also cheaper and has local benefits along the way.
    Road 50 from Mjölby to Motala has been upgrade a lot in recent year, allowing a connection from E4 to E20/E18 to Enköping.
    From there Road 50 again from Enköping to Uppsala and we have a serious contender for bypassing the Stockholm choke point. It does bypass Sörmland and most of östergötland as well, so it is not for all traffic, but it should help solve some of the problems.

  • @ichVII
    @ichVII Pƙed 28 dny +52

    I like that at 0:45, when he says "officials are looking for another solution", the trains are right in sight. The video just derailed a bit after that.

    • @PrayerOrb4
      @PrayerOrb4 Pƙed 28 dny +24

      I get what you are saying, but the purpose of this tunnel is to lead traffic away that would have otherwise passed through the city. Through Stockholm passes one of the main highways in Sweden, and this tunnel would provide an alternative for people passing through

    • @Sevenfold120
      @Sevenfold120 Pƙed 28 dny +4

      @@PrayerOrb4 Would of been nice to get a rail line from SkÀrholmen to Northern stockholm. Would cut down on transit going through stockholm.

    • @filip9564
      @filip9564 Pƙed 28 dny

      You sir are absolutely braindead

    • @WaffleAbuser
      @WaffleAbuser Pƙed 28 dny +3

      @@PrayerOrb4Sure, it will divert some of the traffic, but isn’t the current highway just gonna fill up the freed capacity right away?

    • @ideadlift20kg83
      @ideadlift20kg83 Pƙed 27 dny +5

      @@WaffleAbuser Long term plan is to remove that inner city highway.

  • @CharlieBarbarossa
    @CharlieBarbarossa Pƙed 27 dny +2

    The title update is so on-point!

  • @Monothefox
    @Monothefox Pƙed 28 dny +28

    And if you ask people who study traffic patterns, the bypass will barely have any effect, since there is almost no through traffic; nearly all vehicles are going to or from Stockholm itself.
    Meanwhile, the Citybana, which *doubled* rail capacity in the city, got less than half the budget of the bypass...

    • @AL-lh2ht
      @AL-lh2ht Pƙed 28 dny

      Honestly it seems more like a way to help the values so highway system.

    • @empebee
      @empebee Pƙed 28 dny +2

      Precisely. One government agency concluded that about 204 cars per day would see clear benefits from the project. Since this was a prestige project from powerful politicians, the agency was made redundant soon after.
      Stockholm clearly needs a bypass highway, but since they tried to placate every single citizen with a complaint, the highway was pushed farther and farther out (making it less and less useful) and more and more sections were put under ground (ballooning the cost). For the same cost, they could have built a four lane highway from Stockholm to the Finish border.

    • @zilfondel
      @zilfondel Pƙed 27 dny +6

      Hopefully this will reduce public transit ridership and help convert sweden to a more US-highway centric transportation and urban development model. There are millions of acres in sweden that could support tract housing and big box retail development.

    • @Tera83074
      @Tera83074 Pƙed 27 dny +4

      ⁠@@zilfondellol good one. Made me chuckle. But seriously there’s no way we will go for the US model, that be horrible.

    • @mat39
      @mat39 Pƙed 21 dnem +2

      KĂ€ft sosse

  • @jonathanblomberg
    @jonathanblomberg Pƙed 7 dny

    Been down in that tunnel a few times over the past years while they been working on it an it always amazes me how deep it is

  • @_loss_
    @_loss_ Pƙed 12 dny

    I remember passing the entrance in hÀgggvik plenty of times as a kid. I forgot about it completely.

  • @linusfotograf
    @linusfotograf Pƙed 28 dny +3

    Have you done videos on Slussen or the new Tunnelbanestations? Would be fun to see

  • @thorelind
    @thorelind Pƙed 28 dny +6

    It's probably time to check out the infrastructure projects in gothenburg! That video about gothenburg a while back didn't really cover them

  • @49cchris
    @49cchris Pƙed 25 dny

    Was Amzing to hear about the BM1 on the radio 5! Construction in the future will be 4D printed and A.I. will build our city's in mega factories and then transport them to the sites!

  • @maxjakobsson8491
    @maxjakobsson8491 Pƙed 27 dny

    Good video, maybe revisit this project again in the future if possible

  • @GazMoby
    @GazMoby Pƙed 27 dny

    Very enjoyable as always 👍

  • @Brakvash
    @Brakvash Pƙed 9 dny +1

    To be fair the 4B budget doesn't bother me at all - here in Lund it took 1B just to build a street car line stretching a few kilometers. 4B for a massive tunnel network? These guys are alot better at their job.

  • @TheWertpoly
    @TheWertpoly Pƙed 23 dny

    Hey man, love the videos, please do more videos of projects that you think are bad. would love to have your negative take on some projects

  • @u1zha
    @u1zha Pƙed 27 dny

    My big pet peeve with this project is that they made the Lovö island exit so complex and in such a silly location, traffic channeling to smack dab middle of a nature reserve. What they should've done is swing the tunnel curves around a bit and build a junction before (underneath Kungshatt, for traffic towards Ekerö) and a junction after (around Nockeby).

  • @maroon9273
    @maroon9273 Pƙed 15 dny

    Eastern part of sweden lacks a bypass as well. Extra lanes need to use as busway lane and rail lines.

  • @fwafsacv
    @fwafsacv Pƙed 28 dny +3

    Have they made a video about VÀstlÀnken in Gothenburg, Sweden?

  • @nicolaifr4905
    @nicolaifr4905 Pƙed 27 dny

    Are you guys going to do a video on the Rogfast tunnel, would be interesting to see the logistics of digging sutch a deep tunnel

  • @NickyMitchell85
    @NickyMitchell85 Pƙed 28 dny +18

    The *Boston Big Dig* of SWEDEN 🇾đŸ‡Ș.

    • @mithrillis
      @mithrillis Pƙed 28 dny

      The Big Wet Dig

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L Pƙed 28 dny +2

      Let’s just hope it doesn’t suck funding away from metro rail like it did in Boston


    • @pcongre
      @pcongre Pƙed 27 dny +1

      @@kaitlyn__L it already has, i'm afraid :_)

  • @JoelMatton
    @JoelMatton Pƙed 28 dny +45

    There was a Reddit thread on Swedish Reddit a while back asking people from Stockholm who drive why they don't use public transportation, and they all basically said the same thing: Taking public transportation takes too long, in part because you often need to switch between different trains and busses several times to get to and from work, and every switch can have you waiting at a bus stop/train station for up to 20 minutes. Many said that a 20 minute drive can take an hour on public transportation.

    • @vectoor91
      @vectoor91 Pƙed 28 dny +28

      Stockholm has a very high use of public transit, like twice as many trips are done by public transit than by driving each day. And Stockholm is in the middle of expanding its metro system building 11 new stations.

    • @danmcclaren5436
      @danmcclaren5436 Pƙed 28 dny

      sounds like they need to remain sesual wit it

    • @elldmdnz
      @elldmdnz Pƙed 28 dny +2

      Do some research first bud

    • @alyssapowell1799
      @alyssapowell1799 Pƙed 28 dny +5

      It's even worse if you live outside a large city like Stockholm and aren't going into the city center. Businesses are all over the Stockholm area and it's difficult for there to be enough routes to cover everywhere that people need to go. If you're going to Stockholm to do something on the weekend like a concert or sporting event, it can work really well to take public transportation. For daily commutes to work, it doesn't unless you specific get a new apartment along public transportation routes every time you change jobs. It's not that there aren't people who use public transportation, but it's not practical for some Swedes to use public transportation for their daily commutes.

    • @_loss_
      @_loss_ Pƙed 12 dny

      Trains aren't that far apart unless you're traveling near midnight.
      Also the best mode for transport in Stockholm around that time is by those rentable scooters. There are no cars on the street and the city is small.

  • @ItMeCorban
    @ItMeCorban Pƙed 28 dny +57

    "More lanes have been added but it's not enough" Hmm it's almost like that's not how that works

    • @duncanmcauley7932
      @duncanmcauley7932 Pƙed 23 dny +1

      It’s fairly simple. You can absolutely build wide enough anywhere to tackle congestion. Demand is not infinite. The problem is how destructive and expensive it would be. Much smarter to build dense public transit in the middle of the city. But building outside the city where demand is lower but still justified, particularly for long haulers, is an impressive move on Sweden’s part. It’ll be up to them how land use nearby is managed to avoid significant sprawl.

    • @einar8019
      @einar8019 Pƙed 4 dny

      adding lanes on the essingeleden would just be dumb, its much smarter to finnish the ringroad and the bypass

  • @george_davituri
    @george_davituri Pƙed 18 dny

    God damn, it's pleasure to observe such a mega project

  • @YggdrasilMarcus
    @YggdrasilMarcus Pƙed 28 dny

    What's the name of the song at the end of the video, please?

  • @buyukvegucluturkiye8032
    @buyukvegucluturkiye8032 Pƙed 3 dny

    *As a Stockholmer this project has been absolute DISASTER for the economy, traffic, taxpayers' money due to delays and delays*

  • @bmwknappen
    @bmwknappen Pƙed 23 dny

    Nice film! I have also worked on the project! Buildning electrical infrastructure, several years ago!

  • @MICHALMALACHOVSKY
    @MICHALMALACHOVSKY Pƙed 28 dny +1

    Stunning shot 🏆 🏆 🏆

  • @leosvanemar9712
    @leosvanemar9712 Pƙed 10 dny +1

    Actually around 30 000 islands in Stockholm :)

  • @andredias95
    @andredias95 Pƙed 5 dny

    You should take a look at VÀstlÀnken while you are doing some digging, the huge tunnel building in Gothenburg.

  • @walther2492
    @walther2492 Pƙed 28 dny +21

    "Just one more lane...!"

    • @tbird81
      @tbird81 Pƙed 27 dny +2

      Just 43% more people.

    • @Pottan23
      @Pottan23 Pƙed 11 dny

      London has the M25
      Berlin has the A10
      Paris has the PĂ©riph
      Copenhagen has the O4
      Stockholm got nothing.
      SkÀrholmen - HÀggvik is a 25min (28.8km) drive through Stockholm.
      Avoiding Stockholm turns it into 1 hour 54 minutes trip (165 km). A ringway or bypass has been a wet dream for any driver north or south of stockholm for decades.

  • @krisstopher8259
    @krisstopher8259 Pƙed 28 dny

    That's only one part of the new underground freeway network, like the last 1/3 of it. Even our new central train terminal is deep underground and it's HUGE!

  • @u1zha
    @u1zha Pƙed 27 dny

    This will also connect with a similarly scaled south side bypass (TvÀrförbindelse Södertörn), spaghetti junction go brrrr!

  • @MrSwede001
    @MrSwede001 Pƙed 6 hodinami

    7:29 Yeah the traffic is always like that, I know because I live close to that part your showing

  • @chrisfox6445
    @chrisfox6445 Pƙed 28 dny +17

    I wonder if, in the spirit of encouraging inner city mass transit, the Essingeleden could be narrowed in the future. That's a lot of land that could be repurposed to building, other forms of transport etc. I don't know what you could do with the bridges.

    • @addvurtbikes
      @addvurtbikes Pƙed 28 dny +4

      I think there is a long term plan to phase it out and turn it into a Highline Park situation.

  • @fjord_medoff_08
    @fjord_medoff_08 Pƙed 28 dny

    Dear Fred, Stockholm's underground construction is booming, it's going to expand for 20% for the upcoming years, can you please cover that topic as well? Love everything you do, can't wait for another video

  • @SigfridSWE
    @SigfridSWE Pƙed 11 dny

    Its gonna be so awesome when its done! M
    Gonna do great things for my city!

  • @inorbitaowertrack8454
    @inorbitaowertrack8454 Pƙed 25 dny

    Nice to live in a Town 200 miles vest of Stockholm, Örebro if you wonder.

  • @Dannnneh
    @Dannnneh Pƙed 28 dny +1

    I live right next to this, I used to hear the regular explosion signals.

    • @castorchua
      @castorchua Pƙed 27 dny

      I wonder why they're not using those new boring machines

    • @tomatoe308
      @tomatoe308 Pƙed 12 dny

      we make boom we use boom

    • @brigadgeneralvoid2508
      @brigadgeneralvoid2508 Pƙed 11 dny +1

      @@castorchua Rock is too hard and there's a lot of water

  • @lossless4129
    @lossless4129 Pƙed 28 dny

    That outro song song smacked

  • @PastramiStaven
    @PastramiStaven Pƙed 11 dny +1

    "cold winters" You should see our "summers"... :D

  • @jascollinscork
    @jascollinscork Pƙed 27 dny

    Unbelievable size of a job!!, going far enough outside the city too đŸ€” a fair few link roads back into city will be added??

  • @dataandcolours6284
    @dataandcolours6284 Pƙed 7 dny

    A huge part of the traffic is traffic that is just going through Stockholm due to lack of any good alternative for longer transportation! It's not just caused by traffic that has somewhere close to Stockholm as destination. E4 is by far the most important road in Sweden and what is needed is a very, very wide ring road alternative that completely avoids having passing traffic getting anywhere near Stockholm. This rather intermediate ring will not really fix that much of the problem.
    It can absolutely been argued that it would have made much more sense to update road 55 Norrköping-Katrineholm-StrÀngnÀs-Enköping-Uppsala to a high capacity highway that they also change paths at some places like a relatively cheap updated road that avoids going into Flen. Because even when this extremely expensive project is completed the video is talking about, it will not stop a lot of traffic that has no business driving close to Stockholm to still congest parts close to Stockholm. A lot of the congestion is on the E4 itself for instance between Nyköping and Stockholm (especially SödertÀlje-Stockholm that is both E4 and E20 combined). This problem will not be fixed at all by this project as this bypass simply isn't far enough from the city.
    There is a trend in Sweden of politicians and decision makers having a far to strong "Stockholm perspective" on things and this project seems to be yet another example of that. Them seem completely negligent of the fact that a huge part of the traffic on the E4 close to Stockholm actually have no interest in visiting Stockholm at all, but are just interested in getting from one side of MĂ€laren to the other in an efficient way...
    Updating road 55 would have made so much more sense and be a much better investment per krona spent. "Förbifart Stockholm" (the project discussed in this video) will be very expensive and only solve a small part of the actual problem.

    • @Gfynbcyiokbg8710
      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Pƙed 6 dny

      It really wouldn't have been. Road 55 is 10 times longer and goes through the middle of several small towns that would have to be partially or completely demolished to make way for the upgraded road.
      It would not be significantly cheaper nor would it provide much more benefit than Förbifart Stockholm.

  • @ThisisDevaan
    @ThisisDevaan Pƙed 28 dny +11

    A lot of people are saying that Stockholm doesn’t have enough public transport, but the problem is that the highway network aren’t designed as thruways, but as a commuter option.

  • @pcplayerclarkey3026
    @pcplayerclarkey3026 Pƙed 28 dny +1

    This is what Toronto needs for the gardeniar; an express bypass while there is still room for the option

  • @suprjudy
    @suprjudy Pƙed 7 dny

    Pretty incredible that we haven't advanced to this before now, we had subways so early it's surprising that we didn't level up and just create all of our highways underground considering the vast space and structure we can provide with modern engineering.

  • @ericpaul4575
    @ericpaul4575 Pƙed 28 dny

    I wonder why they decided to use traditional blasting rather than a TBM? Was it just the need to pre grout the route to seal out water?

    • @konskift
      @konskift Pƙed 28 dny +2

      It's solid rock-shield. TBM is for clay/soil/mud/loose rock.

  • @luisalizondo4973
    @luisalizondo4973 Pƙed 18 dny

    Talk about the Lucky Sorter!

  • @patrik5123
    @patrik5123 Pƙed 27 dny

    You should do a video on VÀstlÀnken. You could probably do a series to be honest.

  • @BlackEydPanda
    @BlackEydPanda Pƙed 13 dny

    I live in stockholm, Ive never seen strained traffic in the city centre.

    • @JH-lo9ut
      @JH-lo9ut Pƙed 11 dny

      What do you mean by "strained"?
      If you commute by car, you will experience congestion on every major road leading in to the city in the mornings, and out in the afternoon.
      If you look up a route on Google Maps, most of the inner city is marked with red, =way more traffic than usual, for most of the time during rush hours.
      Essingeleden, the current bypass, is severely congested during rush hours.
      A drive through the city that takes fifteen minutes on a sunday morning will take one and a half hour on a weekday afternoon.

  • @shiguCS
    @shiguCS Pƙed 14 dny

    Speaking of Sweden, when will you be covering VÀstlÀnken and Karlatornet?

  • @intractablemaskvpmGy
    @intractablemaskvpmGy Pƙed 28 dny

    Consider the Austin-San Antonio I-35 second level roadway projects happening right now. It's going up fast, they don't know where the money to pay for it will come from but they are building it anyway. It's a congestion nightmare

  • @eliasbjornfot6371
    @eliasbjornfot6371 Pƙed 24 dny

    You should do a video about the west link (vÀstlÀnken) in Gothenburg

  • @spaceman9599
    @spaceman9599 Pƙed 9 dny

    Thanks for this - good to see it from this perspective. One could only hope there was a better solution than trying to cram all of Sweden into one city whilst the hinterland dies. We have the tech to work from anywhere after all and this idea of having to stack all the companies on top of each other seems very 20th century.

  • @JP_TaVeryMuch
    @JP_TaVeryMuch Pƙed 27 dny

    7:47 What, no mention of a second use for the tunnels?
    There must be. Sweden's famous for it: nuclear shelters, emergency rain storage tanks, public sports halls and swimming pools.
    Guess we'll have to wait to find out.

  • @phasm42
    @phasm42 Pƙed 24 dny +1

    Interesting that they went with drill & blast instead of a TBM. Googling, it's seems TBMs are better suited for tunneling through stable rock, so I guess Stockholm is lacking that..?

    • @erik_med_e
      @erik_med_e Pƙed 15 dny +3

      Since there is no tradition of building TBM tunnels in Sweden’s hard rock, the cost of planning and design is higher compared to alternative methods like “drill and blast.” Also a road with multiple traffic intersections is not favorable for TBM. Sure TBMs are better suited for tunneling through stable rock, but many times Stockholm’s geological conditions does not favor this method.

    • @brigadgeneralvoid2508
      @brigadgeneralvoid2508 Pƙed 11 dny

      Rock is too hard, there's a lot of water, and we already use drill and blast extensively

  • @henrybn14ar
    @henrybn14ar Pƙed 13 dny

    Please do a piece on the VÀstlÀnken fiasco in Gothenburg.

  • @KaiseruSoze
    @KaiseruSoze Pƙed 28 dny

    If you blast a tunnel you crack surrounding rock. Given the continual need to build tunnels, it seems that reusable tunnel boring machines make sense for this project and future projects. I would think a triple wide boring machine would work well or a modular single/double/tripple etc. boring machine would be even better.

    • @Car_Mo
      @Car_Mo Pƙed 28 dny +1

      TBM's isn't always the best solutions, I can see an issue with lowering a TBM down to 80-100m in order to drill in several places/directions at once to save time. It could be that drilling/blasting/excavating is the faster and cheaper solution in the end. They used TMB's to drill the north passage (norra lÀnken) 10 years ago, so I'm sure it was considered

    • @jsoderba
      @jsoderba Pƙed 27 dny +1

      The whole reason the tunnels are so deep (and why the Stockholm subway is so deep) is that it's much faster and cheaper to blast through solid rock than using a TBM in soft material. You can see on the footage that the walls and ceiling of the tunnel is largely naked granite bedrock. In sedimentary layers they would have to cover everything on concrete to keep the tunnel from collapsing and keep water out.
      There are still some big cracks they have to cover, but for most of the tunnels they can just blast straight on through.

  • @lukedowneslukedownes5900
    @lukedowneslukedownes5900 Pƙed 26 dny

    Can you talk about the Super collider ? They invested billions into it back 20 years ago I believe but they stopped. A video from a professor like you would be awesome

  • @ErikTheAndroid
    @ErikTheAndroid Pƙed 12 dny +1

    I live in Stockholm and I can tell you that this new bypass is sorely needed. Currently the E4 which is a major highway which runs north-south through the entire country, goes right through the city center. A major highway running through a city center is just absurd.

    • @usefulcommunication4516
      @usefulcommunication4516 Pƙed 9 dny

      Except it doesn't run through the city centre

    • @einar8019
      @einar8019 Pƙed 4 dny +1

      @@usefulcommunication4516 thats just semantics, you can see the almost entire city hall from the highway

    • @usefulcommunication4516
      @usefulcommunication4516 Pƙed 4 dny

      @@einar8019 If you honestly think the route that the E4 (actually E20) takes around Stockholm constitutes the centre, then I'm guessing you must work for Ryanair and are the person who called Skavsta airfield, 'Stockholm Airport'

    • @ErikTheAndroid
      @ErikTheAndroid Pƙed 2 dny

      @@usefulcommunication4516 The E4 literally goes through Kungsholmen or norrmalm depending on which road you take. It definitely goes through the city centre.

    • @usefulcommunication4516
      @usefulcommunication4516 Pƙed 2 dny

      @@ErikTheAndroid You're talking about Centralbron. If you travelling on "the E4 which is a major highway which runs north-south through the entire country" you wouldn't go anywhere near that. Unless you're a mental case and want to take a major diversion/scenic route.

  • @michaelcolllett9082
    @michaelcolllett9082 Pƙed 27 dny

    Amazing project ,as like massive engineers projects

  • @kajman911
    @kajman911 Pƙed 24 dny +1

    The BM1 is starting by asking if it is a pointless project.
    Then ending by welcoming it!?

  • @nickpetrovski8376
    @nickpetrovski8376 Pƙed 28 dny +1

    Can someone send the design engineers and construction company to Melbourne, Australia?
    We are getting a 6km tunnel that is projected to cost at least €16 billion! đŸ€Šâ€â™‚ïž

    • @magnushem8734
      @magnushem8734 Pƙed 11 dny

      Does Melbourne have the same geological conditions, i.e. hard rock like granite?

    • @petronic1234
      @petronic1234 Pƙed 11 dny

      @@magnushem8734don’t know but it wouldn’t be a factor in the cost, on projects like this in Melbourne it’s all unions and money changing from one department to the next. a worker holding up a stop sign earns over $200k a year. Would Sweden pay similarly?

    • @magnushem8734
      @magnushem8734 Pƙed 11 dny

      @@petronic1234 Labor unions are very strong here in Sweden, but I guess the salary+tax per employee is half of that.
      Ground conditions are critical. My sister is a geotechnical engineer.
      Most of Stockholm has excellent granite rock, except for a few regions with lots of cracks.
      Göteborg was built on mud along the river, and they are constructing a tunnel get very expensive and the city has been partly demolished.
      The most infamous tunnel in Sweden is HallandsÄsen, which is a mountain of gravel on the west coast. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hallands%C3%A5s_Tunnel

  • @ethanorians
    @ethanorians Pƙed 28 dny

    I have pondered many times how beneficial it would be to have underground highways in landscapes with extreme winters.

    • @Car_Mo
      @Car_Mo Pƙed 28 dny

      Coming from Sweden and driving through Norway to Bergen, we passed through 60 tunnels, the longest being 45 Kilometers. Granted, Norway dig tunnels to avoid driving around/over mountains, but the result is the same with tunnels being safer than icy roads ... and Norway still has lots of those.

  • @clivetaylor4300
    @clivetaylor4300 Pƙed 27 dny

    It looks like it will be a fantastic project once completed. We need a new highway between Brisbane and the Gold Coast as the current highway is almost at capacity and is around 25 years old. Increased traffic and commuting between the 2 cities over the years has seen a lack of infrastructure investment for this busy corridor from both our state and federal governments. Hopefully we see some progress in the near future rather than just talk from our politicians.

  • @vxcmdr
    @vxcmdr Pƙed 27 dny +2

    All these people talking crap about highway, they are essential.

  • @johnb0815
    @johnb0815 Pƙed 28 dny +3

    this is still a big and impressive project, but we've seen a lot of those here on this channel.
    the switch to right side traffic mentioned in the intro sounds a lot more interesting, though. why they did it is pretty clear, but it would be nice to know how they did that without causing tons of traffic accidents.

    • @GackFinder
      @GackFinder Pƙed 12 dny

      Sweden switching to right-hand driving didn't cause many accidents at all (except one case of drunk-driving on the left-hand side the day of the switch). Overall, the switch also reduced accidents, because 90% of the cars in Sweden already had their steering wheel on the left, so when Sweden switched, we got left-hand steering in right-hand traffic. Left-hand steering in left-hand traffic is as dangerous as right-hand steering in right-hand traffic because your field of view is being both offset and reduced.

  • @misterfunnybones
    @misterfunnybones Pƙed 28 dny +1

    Accidents will be a nightmare.

  • @anarfox
    @anarfox Pƙed 27 dny

    Side note, when Sweden had left-hand traffic, we still had left-hand driven cars. Which made for exiting overtaking.

  • @padelistsavalos7724
    @padelistsavalos7724 Pƙed 10 dny

    here is an idea for reducing carbon emmisions in the air with tunnels,since tunnels need intakes andd exhausts for air on the underground,you put carbon capture machines right at the air filtering system.That way all the emmisions from cars on the tunnel get trapped and stored in underground rocks before ever coming on the surface,that way you get the best of both worlds,less trafic in the city ,more space for construction and parks,as well as better air quality

  • @PulkaSkurken
    @PulkaSkurken Pƙed dnem

    even tho Stockholm is growing, people move away from it, and for a few years now Stockholm has a negative growth due to the pandamic and remote work. but people dont want to go back to Stockholm for a many different reasons. but stockholm is a area with many companies and other job opportunities. so many travel to stockholm for work. But we have seen the white flight from stockholm to my area that is about 3 hours away from Stockholm. we have a few new "suburbs / communityÂŽs" (not gated) that have popped up and mostly people from stockholm moved in to those. we even have 3 Aviation community ÂŽs but its mixed with Germans, Swedes and other European people.

  • @stefansoder6903
    @stefansoder6903 Pƙed 27 dny

    I think all the tunnelling is done now. The rest of the work is fitting out the tunnels etc.

  • @rytlejon
    @rytlejon Pƙed dnem

    This project has been extremely controversial in Sweden for a couple of reasons. The silly stuff to start with: the tunnel is built under the areas where rich people live. As soon as it reaches poor neighborhoods, it's fine to run the huge highway over ground. Another big question is why it's needed: if the idea is to reduce congestion for people driving around the city, surely the more effective solution would be to use this absolutely huge pile of cash to improve cycling infrastructure and public transport instead. And if the idea is to make sure transport from southern Sweden to northern Sweden don't need to pass through Stockholm - it would have been cheaper to make a highway that completely bypasses the Stockholm region. As it is now you're inviting traffic into the metropolitan area anyway. It's been some time since I read about the details about this (the debate was most heated about 10 years ago, before construction started), but as far as I've understood there's a fundamental issue here where the transport authority is making decisions based on calculations that a growing economy equals more car traffic - when in fact there are official policy documents pointing out that the idea is to reduce car traffic instead. My opinion is that this is a mind boggling amount of money to spend on a highway and that this could have been spent a lot better.

    • @Gfynbcyiokbg8710
      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Pƙed 2 hodinami

      I've never understood the rich/poor argument. It's not like in the US where poor areas were purposefully chosen to be torn down, it's just that the 'poor areas' are where there is the empty space for a above ground section. You couldn't physically build an above ground section in the 'rich areas' without tearing down tons of homes.
      And given how much people are complaining about the costs, surely they should be happy that they are saving costs were possible instead of going for the more expensive option of tunnelling everything.

    • @Gfynbcyiokbg8710
      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Pƙed hodinou

      Also where else would you have put this "cheaper" bypass? The next reasonable place to put it would be where road 55 currently goes. But, to make that a better alternative to the route through Stockholm you'd have to upgrade the entire length of that road, which is about 10 times longer than the current bypass. That would involve demolishing over 50 homes, ruining small towns across MĂ€laren, and maybe even some expensive tunnels that would ensure that the cost savings are minimal, whilst the benefit is massively reduced.

  • @MrGoesBoom
    @MrGoesBoom Pƙed 28 dny

    ( Prefacing this by saying its NOT a complaint ) but it seems like we're getting lots of vids about billion dollar tunnel projects saving the world....which is pretty cool, space is limited but also 3d. Dig dig dig!

  • @shawnfromportland
    @shawnfromportland Pƙed 28 dny +2

    4bn to go under a major city and water ways? in usa this would cost 800bn

    • @Darubah
      @Darubah Pƙed 28 dny +1

      Don't you worry by the time we're actually done we'll have attleast doubled the budget, most likely trippled it.

  • @ACK333
    @ACK333 Pƙed 25 dny

    That should be the one who signed the contract approved the contracts with his team members telling everyone if the project is pointless or not.

  • @neurofiedyamato8763
    @neurofiedyamato8763 Pƙed 28 dny

    I am not sure if Stockholm has it... A intercity train from Skarholmem to Stockholm then to Haggvik would be the more efficient, lower emissions, and cheaper solution. But the bypass is clearly trying to get traffic diverted from the sole landbridge through stockholm. But I wonder why can't a simpler surface running intercity train can't solve. It only need to be tunneled in the city segment and provide far higher capacity and likely less expensive as it will use existing corridor instead of going through waterways.

    • @Car_Mo
      @Car_Mo Pƙed 28 dny +2

      The bypass is just that, a _bypass_ routing north/south-bound highway traffic around the city instead of through it. You cant very well stop cargo traffic coming from the north of Sweden, load it on a train, ship if through Stockholm by train and then offload it from trains and have it continue to the south of Sweden.

    • @pcongre
      @pcongre Pƙed 27 dny

      "clearly trying to"
      except that's a myth - 0.05% of all traffic will be from outside region sthlm according to governmental estimates...this project is just yet another urban motorway for suburbanites

  • @rrsee-zk3zu
    @rrsee-zk3zu Pƙed 26 dny

    Feature ASEAN Countires Projects please! Would love see them.

  • @TheJensss
    @TheJensss Pƙed 17 dny

    And everything is financed without the use of toll roads. We really have something to learn in Norway!

    • @Gfynbcyiokbg8710
      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Pƙed 16 dny +1

      Except 80% of the project will be financed from tolls on other roads

    • @TheJensss
      @TheJensss Pƙed 16 dny

      @@Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Do you mean the money from the city toll roads around Stockholm and Gothenburg?

    • @Gfynbcyiokbg8710
      @Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Pƙed 16 dny

      @@TheJensss only Stockholm

    • @TheJensss
      @TheJensss Pƙed 16 dny

      @@Gfynbcyiokbg8710 Okay, but compaird to Norway that is the same as not having toll roads at all.

    • @GackFinder
      @GackFinder Pƙed 12 dny

      80% from E4 congestion tolls, 20% from "the state". So in other words, 100% financed from tax payers in one way or the other. The tunnel itself "won't have any tolls", but they also promised that the 4,2% (now 25%) VAT tax introduced in 1960 was temporary so yeah. Of course the tunnel will have tolls eventually, it's just a matter of time.

  • @Firebirdtje
    @Firebirdtje Pƙed 28 dny +3

    good idea. city should build more of these bypass express roads. to not be in traffic for each city you need to pass

  • @leonpaelinck
    @leonpaelinck Pƙed 26 dny +1

    Building a bypass or ring road should be combined with reducing the road through the city

    • @GackFinder
      @GackFinder Pƙed 12 dny

      Agree, but remember, we're only talking about at most 3 lanes in each direction. And given the amount of on-ramps and Y-junctions and lane shifts, effectively those 3 lanes are more like 2 lanes due to all the bobbing and weaving you have to do. If you're traveling on the E4 through Stockholm expecting to just cruise steadily in one lane, you're gonna be disappointed. You can only pull that off in the very early mornings when there's less traffic.

    • @brigadgeneralvoid2508
      @brigadgeneralvoid2508 Pƙed 11 dny

      That's exactly what's planned

    • @einar8019
      @einar8019 Pƙed 4 dny

      there is already 3/4ths of a ringroad but it never to finished

  • @davesilver5493
    @davesilver5493 Pƙed 28 dny

    The far less than 1km train tunnel between New York and New Jersey is costing 16 billion. Something doesn’t add up.