Traduction Francais Anglais
A public meeting was held in Argentière on 12th March 2012. The councillors who side with me (ie the opposition) were not invited. In any case, we have never been invited to any meetings in Argentière. Perhaps the organisers think that we're just not interested. The opposite is true. The opposition councillors feel very much akin to the people who live at the top of the valley.
I found out about this meeting at the last minute, entirely by chance.
The hall was jam-packed. The mayor, Eric Fournier made a rapid introduction, then an engineer from RFF made a presentation on the project.
The works will begin on 1st April. They'll pull up the rails, so there won't be any trains. The bus will link Vallorcine with Argentière. If there's heavy snow in April and the col has to shut then Vallorcine will be cut off from the rest of France.
They'll re-make the apron for cars so that it's 4m wide (2m50 at present) and the rails will be sunk into the apron like tram rails. On the left there will be a false pavement to hold the 3rd rail which supplies electricity to the train. This will be closed to pedestrians.
The use as a road will be in alternate directions, but without today's requirement to form convoys of 22 cars max and 48 people max, wearing gas masks. Access will be unmarshalled. There will be automatic barriers controlling access and keeping cars 100m apart. This will allow a lot more crossings than the existing system.
The priority is to be given to cars, so the half hourly trains are not guaranteed when the col is closed.
The tunnel walls will be insulated and waterproofed, then covered with a layer of concrete 20 cm think, to stop ice forming on the tunnel walls. This year the ice has been up to 1m50 thick and has had to be hacked off by hand every day.
Many people thought it was a shame that they hadn't gone for overhead electric wires in the tunnel. This would have been technically difficult and more expensive- the apron and rails would have had to be made lower to have enough height to do this.
On the Montroc side the entry to the tunnel for cars would be by the station forecourt, but the exit would be on the right on the Frasserands side. This means driving over the level crossing and doing a hairpin bend to rejoin the main road. Not easy. Of course people could instead drive down through Frasserands, which won't be appreciated by residents there.
There is a huge problem during the course of the works (2 years) in terms of parking at Montroc. This is a real worry for the inhabitants of the area. The station forecourt will be covered in machinery, the cars of the workers and the portacabins and buildings which the workmen will need to place there. The only solution for the residents is the parking at the "Ferme de Montroc", but the RFF want to put their cement works there. Eric Fournier asked those who were clearly worried to think of where else the cement works could possibly go. Argentière maybe? Nothing has been finalised yet.
It was suggested that the cement could come from the factory at Triente in Switzerland, but that would involve too much pollution from the traffic.
There is another problem on the Buet side- the access route to the tunnel under the railway bridge is too narrow. Snowploughs and emergency vehicles can't cross it. The Conseil Général has promised to widen it to 5m... one day.
But there is an environmental problem- there is a is a very rare plant on the embankment there, Selginella helvetica (Fougeres), which must be preserved at all costs.
One can imagine that in two years time there will be a modernised tunnel capable of carrying a lot more traffic, but the safety of the route is by no means 100% guaranteed. The protection against avalanches at la FIS and les Nants on the Argentière side, and the avalanches of Praz-Torrent and Posettes on the Buet side have not been addressed.
The cost of the tunnel works has now risen to 23 million euros.