Diatomea Footbridge - Integrating Modern Infrastructure into a National Park in Chile
Author(s): |
Frank Schanack
Juan P. Reyes Juan P. Osman Letelier |
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Medium: | conference paper |
Language(s): | English |
Conference: | Footbridge 2017 Berlin - Tell A Story, 6-8.9.2017, Technische Universität Berlin (TU Berlin) |
Published in: | Footbridge 2017 Berlin - Tell A Story |
Year: | 2017 |
DOI: | 10.24904/footbridge2017.09826 |
Abstract: |
The Petrohue Waterfalls in South of Chile are located in one of the most visited of Chile´s National Parks. It receives up to 7,000 visitors per day, most of them without outdoor gear. When the existing footbridge was found structurally insufficient, a new footbridge should be designed that complies with the Park Ranger's vision of a modern National Park. The new visually attractive and spacious Diatomea Footbridge is a hollow steel beam bridge with a steel-concrete composite deck. It is 17.25 m long and 3.4 m wide. When shop drawings were finished, the Ministry of Economy and Tourism wanted to turn the project down, precisely because it looked too modern for a National Nature Park. Luckily, it was too late to change the design, but funds for the construction were put back until further notice. Two years later a volcano eruption affected the existing footbridge and eventually, the Diatomea Footbridge was built. |
Keywords: |
aesthetics composite bridge steel bridge Vierendeel beam organic design bionic design natural environment national park Chile
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License: | This creative work is copyrighted. The copyright holder(s) do(es) not grant any usage rights other than viewing and downloading the work for personal use. Further copying or publication requires the permission of the copyright holder(s). |
Structures and Projects
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data sheet - Reference-ID
10075367 - Published on:
01/09/2017 - Last updated on:
05/06/2024