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 Detroit-Windsor Tunnel - Definition 

The Detroit-Windsor Tunnel connects Detroit, Michigan in the United States, with Windsor, Ontario in Canada. It is the second busiest crossing between the United States and Canada. About 28,000 vehicles use the tunnel each day. The tunnel is jointly owned by the two cities. The Ambassador Bridge also connects these two cities.

Completed in 1930, the tunnel was for decades the only underwater tunnel between two nations in the world, until the Channel Tunnel (or "Chunnel") between England and France was completed in 1994. It was only the third passenger tunnel in the U.S. although several other freight tunnels were in use including the Grand Trunk Railway Tunnel in Port Huron, Michigan and the Michigan Central Railway Tunnel in Detroit, itself. The tunnel was made of sections of steel tube floated into place and sunk into a trench dug in the river bottom. The river section of the tunnel was connected to bored tunnels on both banks. The trench was filled with 4 to 20 foot of mud. Because the tunnel essentially sits on the river bottom, there is a wide no-anchor zone enforced on river traffic.

The Detroit-Windsor Tunnel is 5,160 feet long (1,573 m). At its lowest point, the two-lane roadway is 75 feet (22.8 m) below the river surface.

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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Detroit-Windsor Tunnel".