The tunnels are planned to consist of two 28-foot (8.5 m) diameter tunnels.[2] At 13 miles (21 km) long the main tunnel is expected to become North America’s longest rail tunnel, surpassing the Mount Macdonald Tunnel in British Columbia.[1][2] An additional 1.5-mile (2.4 km) rail tunnel is planned to be constructed to the west. The tunnels are expected to cost around $5 billion.[2]
Locations of the Pacheco and Altamont Passes in California. Both were considered for the California High-Speed Rail route, with the Pacheco Pass option being selected.
In 2004, two options were in consideration for the Diablo Range crossing: the Pacheco Pass option and a "direct" 31-mile (50 km) tunnel between San Jose and Merced significantly north of the Pacheco Pass.[3] A route through the Altamont Pass even further north was also considered.[4] In July 2008 the Pacheco Pass option was selected.[5] The reasons were that the Altamont alignment would require the track to split west of the pass to serve different parts of the Bay Area, would require a new crossing of the San Francisco Bay using a rehabilitated Dumbarton Rail Bridge or a new bridge or tunnel nearby, and would require more homes to be seized by eminent domain. The Pacheco alignment, however, would increase travel times between the Bay Area and points north of Merced, and passes through more environmentally sensitive areas.[4][6][7]
A November 2009 court ruling however reopened the environmental review process.[5] The suit was brought by the cities of Palo Alto, Menlo Park, and Atherton, which opposed elevated high-speed rail tracks running through them and preferred the Altamont Pass route. By September 2010, the rail authority had completed extra studies and reapproved the same route. However, a November 2011 ruling again overturned the approval.[6] The Pacheco Pass alignment was upheld by the California Court of Appeal for the Third District in July 2014.[8][9]
On February 12, 2019, Governor Gavin Newsom in his first State of the State address announced that parts of the system outside the Central Valley segment from Bakersfield to Merced would be indefinitely postponed, including the Pacheco Pass Tunnel.[11] Nonetheless, the CaHSRA board chose the tunnel alignment as their preferred build alternative in September 2019.[12] As of 2020[update] this section of the system has a projected start of service in 2031.[13]
^ abc"Tunneling Issues Report"(PDF). California High-Speed Rail Authority. January 2004. pp. 16, 22–23. Archived from the original(PDF) on April 27, 2019. Retrieved July 19, 2020.