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Bridge

Vallorcine_footpath_bridge_2003-12-13.jpg

A log bridge in the French Alps near Vallorcine.

A bridge is a structure built to span a gorge, valley, road, railroad track, river, body of water, or any other physical obstacle. Designs may be built higher than otherwise needed in order to allow other traffic (particularly ship traffic) beneath.

The purpose of a bridge is to allow people travelling or cargo being transported easier passage by providing a more uniform, and more easily navigable route than what would otherwise be an uneven or impossible path.

History

The Roman Bridge of Sertã was actually built during the Philippine Dynasty (1580-1640).

The first bridges were spans made of wooden logs or planks and eventually stones, using a simple support and crossbeam arrangement.

The arch was first used by the Roman Empire for bridges and aqueducts, some of which still stand today. The Romans also had cement, which reduced the variation of strength found in natural stone. Brick and mortar bridges were built after the Roman era, as the technology for cement was lost then later rediscovered.

Rope bridges, a simple type of suspension bridge, were used by the Inca civilization in the Andes mountains of South America, just prior to European colonization in the 1500s.

During the 18th century there were many innovations in the design of timber bridges by Hans Ulrich, Johannes Grubenmann, and others. The first engineering book on building bridges was written by Hubert Gautier in 1716.

With the rise of the Industrial Revolution in the 19th century, truss systems of wrought iron were developed for larger bridges, but iron did not have the tensile strength to support large loads. With the advent of steel, which has a high tensile strength, much larger bridges were built, many using the ideas of Gustave Eiffel.

Etymology

The Oxford English Dictionary traces the origin of the word bridge to an Old English word brycg, of the same meaning, derived from a hypothetical Proto-Germanic root brugjō. There are cognates in other Germanic languages (for instance Brücke in German, brug in Dutch or bro in Danish and Swedish).

Pontiff

The word for the Pope, pontiff, comes from the word (pontifex) for bridge builder.

Types of bridges

The Golden Gate Bridge - a suspension bridge, connects the city of San Francisco and the south-facing Marin County. Carries 6 lanes of U.S. Route 101/CA 1, pedestrians and bicycles

There are four main types of bridges: beam bridges, cantilever bridges, arch bridges and suspension bridges.

By use

A bridge is usually designed for trains, pedestrian or road traffic, a pipeline or waterway for water transport or barge traffic. In some cases there may be restrictions in use. For example, it may be a bridge carrying a highway and forbidden for pedestrians and bicycles, or a pedestrian bridge, possibly also for bicycles.

An aqueduct is a bridge that carries water, resembling a viaduct, which is a bridge that connects points of equal height.

Decorative and ceremonial bridges

To create a beautiful image, some bridges are built much taller than necessary. This type, often found in east-asian style gardens, is called a Moon bridge, evoking a rising full moon.

Other garden bridges may cross only a dry bed of stream washed pebbles, intended only to convey an impression of a stream.

Often in palaces a bridge will be built over an artificial waterway as symbolic of a passage to an important place or state of mind. A set of five bridges cross a sinuous waterway in an important courtyard of the Forbidden City in Beijing, China. The central bridge was reserved exclusively for the use of the Emperor, Empress, and their attendants.

Index to types of bridges

Image:Pont_du_gard.jpg|
Aqueduct
Image:NagasakiMeganebashi.jpg|
Arch bridge
Image:PontBailey800px.jpg|
Bailey bridge
Image:UniversityBridge-1Clip.jpg|
Bascule bridge
Image:Small footbridge.jpg|
Beam bridge
Image:no imagebowstring archImage:Concrete box girder bridge.JPG|
Box girder bridge
Image:WWI bridge of boats Scheldt.jpg|
Bridge of boats
Image:ThreeTwrBrCenter.jpg|
Cable-stayed bridge
Image:ForthBridgeEdinburgh.jpg|
Cantilever bridge
Image:Puente del Alamillo.jpg|
Cantilever spar cable-stayed bridge
Image:Tarr steps clapper bridge.jpg|
Clapper bridge
Image:Australia sydney-404.jpg|
Compression arch suspended-deck bridge
Image:Guilford vermont covered bridge 20040820.jpg|
Covered bridge
Image:CurlingBridgeClip.jpg|
Curling bridge
Image:Fort ticonderoga drawbridge to demilune.jpg|
Drawbridge
Image:NoImageYetRectFramed.png|
Extradosed bridge
Image:EastbankEsplanade.jpg|
Floating bridge
Image:Hoernbruecke.jpg|
Folding bridge
Image:GirderBridge2.jpg|
Girder bridge
Image:IRBSideViewClip.jpg|
Inca rope bridge
Image:JetwayAtVancouverBC.jpg|
Jetway
Image:Guilford vermont bridge covered bridge interior 20040820.jpg|
Lattice bridge
Image:BNSFBridgeClip.jpg|
Lift bridge
Image:Vallorcine footpath bridge 2003-12-13.jpg|
Log bridge
Image:16 Bay With Link 4.jpg|
Medium Girder Bridge
Image:SFTGMoonBridge.jpg|
Moon bridge
Image:PlateGirderUnderTracks.jpg|
Plate girder bridge
Image:ArmyPontoonBr.jpg|
Pontoon bridge
Image:Uppsala Ultunabron02 2005-06-16.jpg|
Retractable bridge
(Thrust bridge)
Image:SegmentalBridgeFtLauderdale.jpg|
Segmental bridge
Image:ProposedSFOBBEasternSpan.jpg|
Self-anchored suspension bridge
Image:WinnepegBridge.jpg|
Side-spar cable-stayed bridge
Image:StepStoneBridge.jpg|
Step-stone bridge
Image:Holzbrücke bei Essing 1.jpg|
Stressed ribbon bridge
Image:BridgeSubmerging4.jpg|
Submersible bridge
Image:suspension.bridge.bristol.arp.750pix.jpg|
Suspension bridge
Image:Railway swing bridge.jpg|
Swing bridge
Image:FortPittBridge.jpg|
Tied arch bridge
Image:Millenium_bridge_close.jpg|
Tilt bridge
Image:Newport.transporter.750pix.jpg|
Transporter bridge
Image:AlhambraTrestle.jpg|
Trestle
Image:Eastbound_over_SCB.jpg|
Truss arch bridge
Image:LittleManateeRiver.jpg|
Truss bridge
Image:Conwy Castle 2.jpg|
Tubular bridge
Image:Toronto-bloorviaduct.jpg|
Viaduct
Image:Grammene-vierendeelbridge 20030618.jpg|
Vierendeel bridge
Image:Trogbrücke_Magdeburg.JPG|
Water bridge
Image:WeighBridge5500.JPG|
Weigh bridge
Image:BoxerwoodDotComZigZag.jpg|
Zig-zag bridge


Index to bridge related topics

Image:BalsaBridge_Break.jpg|
Balsa wood bridge under load
Image:Monet.waterlilies.500pix.jpg|
Bridges in art
Image:CaissonSchematic.jpg|
Caisson
Image:Paying Toll on passing a Bridge From a Painted Window in the Cathedral of Tournay Fifteenth Century.png|
Toll bridge


Bridge structural and evolutionary taxonomy

BridgeTaxonomyBW.png

A bridge taxonomy showing evolutionary relationships

Bridges may be classified by how the four forces of tension, compression, bending and shear are distributed through their structure. Most bridges will employ all of the principle forces to some degree, but only a few will predominate. The separation of forces may be quite clear. In a suspension or cable-stayed span, the elements in tension are distinct in shape and placement. In other cases the forces may be distributed among a large number of members, as in a truss, or not clearly discernible to a casual observer as in a box beam. Bridges can also be classified by their lineage, which is shown as the vertical axis on the diagram to the right.

Efficiency

A bridge's structural efficiency may be considered to be the ratio of load carried to bridge weight, given a specific set of material types. In one common
CharlesBridge.jpg

Charles Bridge in Prague

challenge young students are to be divided into groups of two or three and then to be given a fixed quantity of wood sticks, a specific distance to span, and a given glue, and then to construct a bridge that will be tested to destruction by the progressive addition of load at the center of the span. The bridge taking the greatest load is by this test the most structurally efficient. A more refined measure for this exercise is to weigh the completed bridge rather than measure against a fixed quantity of materials provided, a test that emphasizes economy of materials and efficient glue joints.

A bridge's economic efficiency will be site and traffic dependent, the ratio of savings by having a bridge (instead of, for example, a ferry, or a longer road route) compared to its cost. For a given site, kind of bridge employed and the materials used determine the total cost, a lifetime cost composed of materials, labor, machinery, engineering, cost of money, maintenance, refurbishment, risk potential, and ultimately, demolition and associated disposal, recycling, and reuse. Bridges employing only compression are relatively inefficient structurally, but may be highly cost efficient where suitable materials are available near the site. For medium spans, trusses or box beams are usually most economical, while in some cases, the appearance of the bridge may be more important than its cost efficiency. The longest spans usually require suspension bridges.

Notable bridges

*Akashi-Kaikyo Bridge - Japan, with the longest section span of 1.9 km.
*Bosphorus Bridge - Turkey, connects Asia and Europe
*Brooklyn Bridge - connecting the New York City boroughs of Manhattan and Brooklyn.
*Charles Bridge - Czech Republic, famous 14th century bridge in Prague
*Confederation Bridge - Canada, world's longest bridge over waters that freeze.
*Forth Railway Bridge - Scotland, one of the most famous cantilever bridges in the world.
*Golden Gate Bridge - USA, one of the most famous suspension bridges in the world.
*Great Belt Fixed Link, Eastern Bridge - Denmark, second longest section span of 1.6 km
*Horai Bridge, Shitzuoka, Japan. At 897.422 m (2,944 ft), the longest wooden toll bridge. Built in 1867.
*Hercilio Luz Bridge - Florianopolis, Brazil, longest brazilian suspension bridge, one of the 100 largest suspension bridges of the world and one of the oldest hanging bridges in the world.
*The Iron Bridge - England, the world's first iron bridge.
*Jamuna Bridge- Bangladesh, longest rail-road bridge in south asia , 2nd longest in world.
*Lake Pontchartrain Causeway - USA, spanning Lake Pontchartrain in south Louisiana, it is the longest bridge in the world at 23.87 miles (38.41 km).
*Lupu Bridge- China, longest single steel arch.
*Mackinac Bridge - USA, Opened to traffic in 1957, connecting the two peninsulas of Michigan; held the title of the world's longest two tower suspension bridge between anchorages until the 1990s.
*Mahatma Gandhi Setu - India, the longest river bridge in the world.
*Menai Suspension Bridge - Wales, first road suspension bridge in the world.
*Millau Viaduct - France, the tallest vehicular bridge in the world.
*Øresundbroen/Öresundsbron - Denmark - Sweden
*Overtoun Bridge, - Scotland, dogs have leaped to their deaths from this bridge, leading to urban legends.
*Palace Bridge - St Petersburg, Russia, one of iconic images of the city
*Penang Bridge - Malaysia, longest bridge in Southeast Asia.
*Québec Bridge - Canada, largest cantilever bridge in the world.
*San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge - USA, especially for seismic retrofit and eastern span replacement.
*Sundial Bridge - USA, a dramatic single cantilever spar cable stayed span for pedestrians.
*Sunshine Skyway Bridge - USA, longest cable-stayed concrete bridge in the world. Replaced a cantilever truss structure which partially collapsed in 1980 as a result of collision by a freighter.
*Sydney Harbour Bridge - Australia, arguably the best-known suspended-deck compression arch bridge.
*Tacoma Narrows Bridge - USA, famous for its collapse due to aerodynamic effects.
*Tatara Bridge - Japan, largest span cable-stayed bridge.
*Tower Bridge - London, England, and a symbol of this city.
*Tsing Ma Bridge - Hong Kong, the world's longest rail & road suspension bridge
*Tyne Bridge - England, one of Northern England's most iconic structures.
*Trajan's bridge - Romania, ancient Roman bridge over the river Danube, only fragments visible.
*U Bein Bridge in Amarapura, a 1.2 km wooden footbridge, the longest teak bridge in the world.
*Vasco da Gama Bridge - Portugal, the longest bridge in Europe at 17.2 km.
*Verrazano-Narrows Bridge - USA - longest suspension bridge in USA.
*Victoria Falls Bridge - linking Zimbabwe to Zambia, built in 1905 as part of the projected Cape-Cairo railway.
*Zakim Bunker Hill Bridge - USA, built during Boston's Big Dig, the widest cable-stayed bridge.
*Pearl Harbor Memorial Bridge - USA, will be the first extradosed cable-stayed bridge constructed in the United States.
*Rio-Antirio bridge - Greece, the longest cable-stayed bridge in the world.

Catastrophic collapses

BridgeTownCountryDateConstruction type, use of bridgeReasonNumber death/injuriesDamage! Remarks
Stirling BridgeStirlingScotlandSeptember 1297Beam and trestle over the River ForthOverload by attackers during the Battle of Stirling Bridge Unknown, attacking forces defeatedBridge rendered unusableCollapse may have been assisted by defending forces.
Bridge of Angers (France)AngersFranceApril 16th 1850Suspension bridge over Maine riverResonance of soldiers led to collapse 226/?Bridge total damageMarching columns now break step when crossing bridges.
Yarmouth BridgeGreat YarmouthEnglandMay 2 1845SuspensionPeople had crowded onto the bridge to see a circus clown go down the river in a barrel pulled by geese. As the weight shifted as the barrel passed underneath the suspension chains on the south side snapped and the bridge deck tipped over.79 people drowned, mainly children.Suspension chains snapped due to overload.[1]
Tay Rail BridgeDundeeUKDecember 28th 1879Continuous girder bridge, steel framework on cast iron columns, railway bridgeInsufficient consideration of the wind load, inadequate construction, collapsed because of the stresses caused by a storm 75/0Bridge unusable, piers partly reused, train heavily damagedLocomotive was saved from the Tay and was still in use 19 years later known as "The Diver".
Québec BridgeQuebecCanadaAugust 29th 1907Cantilever bridge, steel framework, railway bridgeCollapsed during construction74/11Bridge completely destroyed 
Theodor-Heuss-Rhine River BridgeLudwigshafenGermanyMarch 1940Bridge of concrete, Motorway bridgeCollapsed during construction?/?Bridge totally destroyedResulted in delay in completion of the motorway crossing of the Rhine until 1953
Tacoma Narrows BridgeUSANovember 7th 1940Road bridge, cable suspension with plate girder deckAerodynamically poor form resulted in resonanceNoBridge partially destroyed, one car lost, and one dog killedBecame known as "Galloping Gertie", in the first 4 months after opening up until its collapse under a previously unseen resonant mode. Since that time all new bridges have been modelled in wind tunnels.
The bridge at RemagenRemagenGermanyMarch 17th 1945Truss railroad and pedestrian bridgeCollapse due to previous battle damage incurred March 7th, 194528 U.S. soldiersTotal destructionCapture of intact bridge offered significant short term tactical advangage to Allied forces. Collapse was not strategically significant due to placement of parallel floating bridges during the previous week
Harrow and Wealdstone rail crashHarrow WealdEnglandOctober 8th 1952Pedestrian footbridgeCollapse due to collision with train112 dead 340 injuredTotal destruction-Tangiwai railway bridgeTangiwaiNew ZealandDecember 24 1953Railway bridgeDamaged by lahar minutes before passenger train passed over it.134/151-General Rafael Urdaneta BridgeMaracaiboVenezuelaApril 6 1964Road bridgeShip collision72 section collapsedCurrently in Operation
Silver BridgeUSA15 December 1967Road bridge, chain link suspensionMaterial fault and Corrosion46/9Bridge and 37 vehicles destroyed 
West Gate BridgeMelbourneAustraliaOctober 15, 1970Road BridgeCollapse during construction35112 metre span between piers 10 and 11 collapsedSection sprung back and collapse during attempts to remove a buckle cause by a difference in camber of 4.5 inches 
South Bridge Koblenz KoblenzGermany10 November 1971Road bridgeBridge bent into Rhine13/?Bridge completely destroyed 
ReichsbrückeViennaAustriaAugust 1st, 1976Road bridge with TramColumn fractured1/0Bridge, one bus and a lorry destroyed, ships damagedConcrete of the column had never been examined, was internally totally destroyed; "higher force"
Almö BridgeStenungsundSwedenJanuary 18, 1980Bridge with bow built of concreteShip collision8/?Bridge and several cars destroyed 
Sunshine Skyway BridgeUSA1980Steel Cantilever BridgeShip collision35/?1200 ft. of southbound span, several cars and a bus destroyedDemolished and replaced with cable-stayed bridge
Aschaffenburg Main River Freeway BridgeAschaffenburgGermany1988Bridge of Motorway A 3 over River MainError in construction1/0Bridge total damagePartial collapse at Repetitive sliding
Bridge over railway line at EschedeEschedeGermanyJune 3rd, 1998Road bridgeTrain disaster101/105 Destruction by train crashing on pillar, killed and injured people were train passengers
Motorway bridge at Almuñecar, Province of Granada, Spain (search correct name of bridge)AlmuñecarSpainNovember 7th 2005Motorway bridgeConstruction, accident, reason unknown6/3 A 60 metre long part fell 50 metre deep

See also


*BASE jumping
*Bridges in art
*List of bridges
*List of bridges by length
*List of largest suspension bridges
*Moveable bridge
*Pontoon bridge
*Toll bridge
*List of bridge disasters
*Balsa wood bridges

External links

*Structurae - International Database and Gallery of Structures with over 10 000 Bridges.
*American Society of Civil Engineers History and Heritage of Civil Engineering - Bridges
*Bridge Building — Art and Science Comprehensive explanations about bridges.
*Bridge Basics A guide to bridge terminology and styles
*Bridge disasters
*A dictionary of bridge terms
*Digital Bridge Library at Lehigh University
*Flickr Pictures tagged with Bridge by most interesting
*Bridges and Tunnels of Allegheny County and Pittsburgh, PA Details of over 2,000 bridges of 8 feet span or greater. Bridge engineers hold their conventions in Pittsburgh.
*Federal Highway Administration Bridge Technology
*RRbridge (Yahoo Groups)



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