Wiehltal bridge
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Wiehltal bridge is a highway bridge on the A4 motorway between Cologne and Olpe over the Wiehltal Valley at Engelskirchen (Oberbergischer Kreis), North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany.
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[edit] Overview
The bridge is 30.25 m wide, 705 m long and has a bridge surface of 21.326 m². The largest height over ground is 60 m. It consists completely of a steelwork construction, whose rolling-element bearing rests on concrete pillars. In contrast to similar bridges, the roadways of both driving directions are carried by continuous elements. The construction of the bridge was finished in 1971.
[edit] Damage and closure
At 10:40 on August 26, 2004 a car collided with a tanker truck containing 32,000 liters of fuel on the Wiehltal Bridge. The guardrails were designed only to stop vehicles up 13 tons and were unable to hold the truck, which fell 100 meters onto the A4 Autobahn and exploded. The truck driver was killed; the heat damage destroyed the load-bearing ability of the bridge and it had to be closed to traffic.
Provisional repairs were made in autumn 2004. Plans for a replacement bridge are expected to be formulated in the spring of 2005. Repairs are estimated at 32 million euros, and replacement could cost 250 million euros, including the cost for disposing of the waste. This was by far the most expensive accident in the history of the Federal Republic of Germany.
[edit] See also
[edit] External links
- Brief accident summary from the Hazardous Cargo Bulletin
- German wikipedia (article in German)