Structure initially thought to be possible Halifax tunnel just a sewer pipe
HALIFAX — Construction workers in Halifax created a stir on social media when they uncovered a piece of infrastructure dating back to the 1800s, stoking speculation they had finally found a fabled underground tunnel network.
Archaeologist Laura de Boer and her crew were working on a downtown streetscape project when someone unearthed the structure, took a photo of it and said it was part of a tunnel.
The discovery on Argyle Street fuelled excited conversation online that it was the entrance to a fabled underground tunnel network, an idea that has tantalized Nova Scotians for decades.
In the end, the structure turned out to be a manhole estimated to be built in the late 19th century and used to access storm water and a sewer line.


