Transporter bridge

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A transporter bridge (also ferry bridge or aerial transfer bridge) is a type of movable bridge that carries a segment of roadway across a river. The gondola is slung from a tall span by wires or a metal frame. The design has been used to cross navigable rivers or other bodies of water, where there is a requirement for ship traffic to be able to pass. This has been a rare type of bridge, with fewer than two dozen built. Just eight, plus one converted into a lift bridge, continue to be used today. The first transporter bridge, Vizcaya Bridge was built in Portugalete, Spain in 1893. The design from Alberto Palacio[1] inspired others to attempt similar structures. The idea found use where it was seen as impractical to build the long approach ramps that would be required to reach a high span, and in places where ferries are not easily able to cross. Because transporter bridges can carry only a limited load, the idea was little used with the rise of the automobile.

The first French bridge was destroyed by the French army to slow down German troops in World War II.

Transporter bridges were most popular in France, where five were erected and another was partially completed. However, the United Kingdom has the largest number of transporter bridges today with four, though one is not currently in use.

The Newport Transporter Bridge was built in 1906 across the River Usk in Newport. Because the river banks are very low at the crossing point (a few miles south of the city centre) a traditional bridge would need a very long approach ramp and a ferry could not be used at low tide. The Newport bridge[2] was a Ferdinand Arnodin design.

The Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge The car can carry 200 people, 9 cars or 6 cars and one minibus.
The Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge The car can carry 200 people, 9 cars or 6 cars and one minibus.

The only other such bridge in the UK is the Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge. When the latter featured in the 2002 series of the popular British TV show Auf Wiedersehen, Pet, people flocked to the area to check that the bridge was still there.

In the United States, two such bridges were built. The first was the Aerial Bridge built in Duluth, Minnesota in 1905, although the city had originally planned to build a vertical lift bridge at the site. The transporter design was used for about 25 years before the structure was reconfigured to lift a central span in 1930.

The Newport Transporter Bridge can carry 6 cars and 120 passengers
The Newport Transporter Bridge can carry 6 cars and 120 passengers

The second American transporter bridge was different from other designs and partially resembled gondola lifts used in mountainous regions. The Sky Ride was part of the 193334 Chicago World's Fair ("Century of Progress"), it was taken down after standing for just two years. However, it was the longest bridge of this type ever built at the time.

Two transporter bridges exist in Germany, in Rendsburg and Osten (Oste). One unique example is the bridge at Rendsburg, which is actually two bridges in one. A railroad link crosses high above on the top span, and the suspended ferry carries traffic on the valley floor.

The Soviets built the longest recorded transporter bridge, two decades later, in Stalingrad (now Volgograd).

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[edit] Known transporter bridges

Bridge Location Completed Span Notes
Aerial Lift Bridge Duluth, Minnesota, USA 1905 120 m converted into a lift bridge in 1929, in use
Bizerta/Brest Transporter Bridge Bizerta, Tunisia 1898 109 m moved to Brest, France in 1909, damaged 1944, demolished 1947
Bordeaux Transporter Bridge Bordeaux, France 400 m
(total)
started 1910 but never completed, demolished 1942
Kiel Transporter Bridge Kiel, Germany 1910 128 m demolished 1923
Marseille Transporter Bridge Marseille, France 1905 165 m destroyed 1944
Middlesbrough Transporter Bridge Middlesbrough, United Kingdom 1911 177 m in use
Nantes Transporter Bridge Nantes, France 1903 141 m demolished 1958
Newport Transporter Bridge Newport, United Kingdom 1906 181 m in use
Osten Transporter Bridge Osten, Germany 1909 80 m in use
Vizcaya Bridge Portugalete, Spain 1893 164 m in use
Puente Transbordador Buenos Aires, Argentina 1914  ? Still in place but disused since 1947
Rendsburg High Bridge Rendsburg, Germany 1913 140 m in use, combo railroad/transporter bridge
Rio de Janeiro Transporter Bridge Rio de Janeiro, Brazil 1915 171 m demolished 1935
Rochefort-Martrou Transporter Bridge Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France 1900 140 m in use
Rouen Transporter Bridge Rouen, France 1898 142 m destroyed 1940
Royal Victoria Dock Bridge London, United Kingdom 1998 128 m in use, but not yet a transporter bridge.
Sky Ride Chicago, Illinois, USA 1933 564 m demolished 1934
Stalingrad Transporter Bridge Volgograd, Russia 1955 874 m demolished
Warrington Transporter Bridge Warrington, United Kingdom 1916 57 m disused, listed as an "ancient monument", but still at risk
Widnes-Runcorn Transporter Bridge Widnes-Runcorn, United Kingdom 1905 304 m demolished 1961

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