Stolma Bridge

Stolma Bridge
Stolmabrua

View of the bridge
Coordinates 59°59′47″N 5°06′12″E / 59.9965°N 5.1032°ECoordinates: 59°59′47″N 5°06′12″E / 59.9965°N 5.1032°E
Carries 151
Crosses Stolmasundet
Locale Austevoll
Owner Statens vegvesen
Characteristics
Design Cantilever box-girder
Material Steel and concrete
Total length 467 metres (1,532 ft)
Width 9 metres (30 ft)
Longest span 301 metres (988 ft)
Number of spans 3
Vertical clearance 30 metres (98 ft)
History
Construction end 1998
Opened 14 Nov 1998

Stolma Bridge (Norwegian: Stolmabrua) is a road bridge over the Stolmasundet strait in Austevoll municipality, Hordaland county, Norway. It connects the islands of Stolmen and Selbjørn. The bridge is 467 metres (1,532 ft) long and has three spans, the largest of which is 301 metres (988 ft). The construction cost was US$15.3 million.[1]

Bridge design

The bridge is a cantilevered prestressed concrete box girder bridge using low density concrete, with a vertical clearance of 30 metres (98 ft). To achieve its record length for box girder construction, the hollow concrete box girders are 7 metres (23 ft) wide and taper from 15 metres (49 ft) inbox beam depth over the piers to 3.5 metres (11 ft) in the center of the span. To reduce its weight, the center of the main span is constructed of high-strength low-density concrete with a density of 1,940 kilograms per cubic metre (3,270 pounds per cubic yard). The short end spans which cantilever the main span are ballisted with gravel.[2] The bridge was opened for traffic 14 November 1998 and is part of County Road 151. It was then the world's longest bridge of this type.[3][4][5]

See also

References

  1. "Construction Facts: The Sourcebook of Statistics, Records, & Resources". Engineering News Record (McGraw Hill) 251 (20a). Nov 2003. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  2. Fernández Troyano, Leonardo (2003). Bridge engineering. Thomas Telford.
  3. Ingebrigsten, Tom (May 1999). "Stolma Bridge, Norway". Structural Engineering International (Nicolas Janberg ICS) 9 (2): 100–102. Retrieved 6 August 2009.
  4. Stolma Bridge at Structurae. Retrieved 2014-12-31.
  5. Merzagora, Eugenio A. (ed.). "Road Viaducts & Bridges in Norway (499-200 m)". Norske bruer og viadukter. Retrieved 2014-12-31.