Oresund Bridge

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Oresund Bridge
Øresundsbroen, Öresundsbron
Oresund BridgeØresundsbroen, Öresundsbron
Carries 4 lanes of European route E20
Double track Oresund Railway Line
Crosses Oresund strait (The Sound)
Locale Copenhagen, Denmark and Malmö, Sweden
Design Cable-stayed bridge
Longest span 490 metres (1,608 ft)
Total length 7,845 metres (25,738 ft)
Width 23.5 metres (77.1 ft)
Clearance below 57 metres (187 ft)
AADT ca. 17,000 road vehicles
Opening date July 2, 2000
Toll 260DKK[1] /325SEK[2] /36EUR[3]
Coordinates 55°34′31″N, 12°49′37″E
Aerial Photo of Oresund Bridge.
Aerial Photo of Oresund Bridge.
Satellite image of the Oresund Bridge.
Satellite image of the Oresund Bridge.
View from Malmö
View from Malmö
View from Öresund
View from Öresund

The Oresund Bridge (Danish Øresundsbroen, Swedish Öresundsbron, joint hybrid name Øresundsbron) is a combined two-track rail and four-lane road bridge across the Oresund strait. The bridge-tunnel is the longest combined road and rail bridge in Europe and connects the two metropolitan areas of the Oresund Region: the Danish capital of Copenhagen and the Swedish city of Malmö. The international European route E20 runs across the bridge and through the tunnel via the two lane motorway, as does the Oresund Railway Line. The bridge is the longest border crossing bridge in the world.

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[edit] Name

In Sweden and Denmark the bridge is most often referred to as Öresundsbron or Øresundsbroen, respectively. The bridge company itself insists on Øresundsbron, a compromise between the two languages which would symbolise a common cultural identity of the region, the people becoming 'Oresund citizens' once the bridge was established. Since it is actually a bridge and a tunnel, it is sometimes more technically correctly named the Oresund Link or Oresund Connection (Danish: Øresundsforbindelsen, Swedish: Öresundsförbindelsen). The Sound Bridge is occasionally heard, using the traditional English name of the strait.

[edit] History

Construction began in 1995. The last section was constructed on August 14, 1999. Crown Prince Frederik of Denmark and Crown Princess Victoria of Sweden met midway to celebrate its completion. The official inauguration took place on July 1, 2000, with Queen Margrethe II, and King Carl XVI Gustaf, presiding. The bridge was opened for traffic later that day. Before the inauguration 79,871 runners competed in a half distance marathon (Broloppet, the Bridge Run) from Amager (in Denmark) to Skåne (in Sweden) on June 12, 2000.

Initially the usage of the bridge was not as high as expected, which was generally attributed to the expense of crossing. 2005 and 2006, however, have seen a rapid increase in the volume of traffic on the bridge. This phenomenon may be due to Danes buying homes in Sweden and commuting to their work in Denmark, because the price of housing in Malmö is lower than in Copenhagen. As of 2008 a single car ride across the bridge costs DKK 260, SEK 325 or EUR 36 (however, discounts of up to 75% are available for regular users). In 2007 almost 25 million people traveled over the bridge, 15.2 million in cars and buses and 9.6 million by train.

[edit] Features

The bridge has one of the longest cable-stayed main spans in the world at 490 metres (1,608 ft). The height of the highest pillar is 204 metres (669 ft). The total length of the bridge is 7,845 metres (25,738 ft), which is approximately half the distance between the Swedish and Danish landmasses, and its weight is 82,000 metric tons. On the bridge, the two rail-tracks are beneath the four road lanes. The bridge has a vertical clearance of 57 metres (187 ft), although most boat traffic across Oresund still passes over the Drogden strait (where the tunnel lies). The bridge was designed by Arup.

[edit] Peberholm, artifical island

The bridge ends in the middle of Øresund, on an artifically built island, called Peberholm. The island is more than 4 km long and a few hundred metres wide, belongs to Denmark and is now an unpopulated natural reserve.

[edit] The Drogden Tunnel

The connection between Peberholm and the nearest populated part of Denmark is through a tunnel, called Drogdentunnelen (the Drogden Tunnel). The tunnel is 4,050 metres (13,287 ft) long, a 3,510 metre long buried undersea tunnel plus two 270-metre gate-tunnels. The reason to build a tunnel here instead of another bridge is that it is too near the Copenhagen Airport.

[edit] Rail transport

The public transport by rail is operated jointly by the Swedish SJ and Skåne commuter rail and the Danish Danske Statsbaner. A series of new dual-voltage trains were developed which link the Copenhagen area with Malmö and Southern Sweden as far as Gothenburg and Kalmar on selected departures. The bridge is also served by X2000 trains from Stockholm. Copenhagen Airport at Kastrup is served by its own train station close to the western bridgehead. Across the bridge trains run every 20 minutes, and once an hour during the night.

The rail section is double track standard gauge (1435 mm) and capable of high-speeds exceeding 200 km/h. There were challenges related to the difference in electrification and signalling between the Danish and Swedish railway networks. The solution chosen is to switch electrical system, from Swedish 15 kV, 16,7 Hz to Danish 25 kV, 50 Hz AC right before the eastern bridgehead (at Lernacken in Sweden). The line is signalled with the standard Swedish system all across the bridge. On Peberholm, the line switches to Danish signalling which continues into the tunnel. Sweden runs railways with left-hand traffic and Denmark with right-hand traffic. The switch is made at the Malmö railway station, which is a terminus station. For the new Malmö City Tunnel connection a bridge will pass one track to the other side.

[edit] Costs

The cost for the entire Øresund connection construction, including motorway and railway connections on land, was calculated to DKK 30.1 billion according to the 2000 year price index. The cost of the bridge is expected to be paid back by 2035. Sweden has started spending SEK 9.45 billion more, on the Malmö City Tunnel (2006-2012) as a new rail connection to the bridge.

[edit] Toll charge

As of January 2008, the toll for driving the fixed link is as follows (one way trip):

Vehicle Danish currency[1] Swedish currency[2] Euro[3]
Motorcycle 145 DKK 180 SEK 20 EUR
Standard car 260 DKK 325 SEK 36 EUR
Motorhome/Car+Caravan 520 DKK 650 SEK 71 EUR
Minibus (6-9 meters) 520 DKK 650 SEK 71 EUR
Bus (longer than 9 meters) 1100 DKK 1365 SEK 151 EUR
Lorry/Truck (longer than 9 meters) 775 DKK 960 SEK 106 EUR

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Øresundsbron - kontantpriser (Danish)
  2. ^ a b Øresundsbron - kontantpriser (Swedish)
  3. ^ a b Øresund Bridge - cash prices (English)

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

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Coordinates: 55.57° N 12.85° E