Truss arch bridge

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Truss arch bridge
Garabit Viaduct, a thrust arch type employing a catenary shape
Ancestor Truss bridge, arch bridge
Related None
Descendant Compression arch suspended-deck bridge
Carries Pedestrians, vehicles, light rail, heavy rail
Span range Medium
Material structural steel
Movable No
Design effort Medium
Falsework required Sometimes, but long spans are often built using temporary cantilevers

A truss arch bridge combines elements of a truss and an arch. The actual resolution of forces will depend upon the design. If no horizontal thrusting forces are generated this becomes an arch shaped truss, essentially a bent beam - see Moon bridge for an example. If horizontal thrust is generated but the apex of the arch is a pin joint, this is termed a three-hinged arch - see The Iron Bridge for an example. If no hinge exists at the apex, it will normally be a two-hinged arch.

In the Iron Bridge shown below, the structure of each frame emulates the kind of structure that previously had been made of wood. Such a wood structure uses closely fitted beams pinned together, so the members within the frames are not free to move relative to one another, as they are in a pin-jointed truss structure that allows rotation at the pin joint. Such rigid structures (which impose bending stresses upon the elements) were further developed in the 20th century as the Vierendeel truss.

The steel Stoney Creek Bridge carries the Canadian Pacific Railway
The steel Stoney Creek Bridge carries the Canadian Pacific Railway
The Iron Bridge, a three-hinged arch and the first metal bridge
The Iron Bridge, a three-hinged arch and the first metal bridge

[edit] Some bridges of this type

Wikimedia Commons has media related to:
  • The Iron Bridge (1791), the first metal bridge of any kind, still standing.
  • Maria Pia Bridge (1877), Gustave Eiffel's pioneering two-hinge arch.
  • Navajo Bridge An older (1929) and newer (1995) bridge of the same general construction, each built as unsupported cantilevers joined with a central pin.
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