Tsakona Arch Bridge

Tsakona Arch Bridge
Τοξωτή Γέφυρα Τσακώνας
Carries TBA
Crosses Tsakona Valley
Locale Tsakona & Paradiseia, near Megalopoli, Greece
Official name TBA
Maintained by Moreas SA, J/V ALPINE BAU-ΤΕRNA SA
Characteristics
Design Arch bridge
Total length 490 meters (1,610 ft)
Width 27 meters (89 ft)
Longest span 300 meters (980 ft)
History
Opened 28 February, 2016
Statistics
Daily traffic TBA

The Tsakona Arch Bridge (Greek: Τοξωτή Γέφυρα Τσακώνας), is one of the world's longest multi-span arch bridge. It crosses the Tsakona Valley and it spans a dangerous location near Megalopoli, where the last decades there are landslides.[1][2]

Construction

The Tsakona Arch Bridge, with length of 490 meters,[1] is the last work that remains to complete the section Paradeisia – Tsakona axis Tripolis – Kalamata (made by the State and will be delivered to the consortium Moreas). As stated in the "Courage" the project leader Nikos Don, this bridge is one of the most difficult engineering projects, after the Rio-Antirrio bridge and cost a total of 15 million euros, with the bypass that operates today.

The bridge is supported at three points: one at each end (abutments) and one that is closer to the top of pier. This last is the most important: it is basically a giant 'prefab', which will ensure the stability of the bridge. From the pier start the arch of the bridge, a maximum height of 30 meters, which leads to the opposite edge. The two arches, one on each side, supported the metal part of the bridge on which the road is located.[3]

Its construction started in 2008[1] and was opened for traffic in January 2016.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Tsakona Bridge Τ4 Domi S.A.
  2. http://greece.greekreporter.com/2014/08/30/one-of-the-worlds-largest-arch-bridges-built-in-greece/
  3. http://metalkat.gr/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=815:2014-03-26-06-31-27&catid=38:2010-02-10-15-44-50&Itemid=102

Coordinates: 37°17′46″N 22°01′33″E / 37.29611°N 22.02583°E / 37.29611; 22.02583

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