General Information
Project Type
Function / usage: |
Motorway bridge / freeway bridge |
---|---|
Structure: |
Haunched girder bridge |
Material: |
Prestressed concrete bridge |
Construction method: |
Balanced cantilever method |
Material: |
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Location
Location: |
Beška, Srem , Serbia |
---|---|
Crosses: |
|
Next to: |
Beška Bridge (1975)
|
Coordinates: | 45° 10' 11.27" N 20° 4' 46.58" E |
Technical Information
Dimensions
total length | 2 205 m | |
approach viaduct | ||
---|---|---|
1 | total length | 1 485 m |
2 | total length | 180 m |
main bridge | ||
main span | 210 m | |
total length | 540 m |
Materials
superstructure |
prestressed concrete
|
---|---|
piers |
reinforced concrete
|
abutments |
reinforced concrete
|
Excerpt from Wikipedia
Beška Bridge (Serbian: Мост код Бешке, romanized: Most kod Beške) crosses the Danube river near Beška, Serbia on the A1 motorway, part of the European route E75. It consists of two identical prestressed concrete constructions, the first being completed in 1975 and the second in 2011. With 2,205 m total length, it is the longest bridge over the Danube.
The first bridge was designed by architect Branko Žeželj, who also designed Belgrade Fair – Hall 1, Žeželj Bridge and the Prokop station. It was built by Mostogradnja from 1971 to 1975. It was bombed twice and partly destroyed during the NATO bombing of Serbia on 1 April and 21 April 1999, but it was temporarily fixed soon after the bombing was over and reopened on 19 July 1999, as it is an important part of the E75.
A twin new bridge for northbound traffic was built right next to the old one between 2008 and 2011, by a consortium led by Austrian group Alpine Bau, and was opened on October 3, 2011. After its opening, the old bridge was closed for reconstruction, to be finally opened for the designated traffic in August 2014. The total contracted value of the works was €33.7 million, and it was financed from an EBRD loan.
The bridge carries a full motorway profile, having two traffic lanes, hard shoulder lane and two pedestrian lanes.
Text imported from Wikipedia article "Beška Bridge" and modified on May 20, 2020 according to the CC-BY-SA 4.0 International license.
Participants
Relevant Web Sites
Relevant Publications
- Donaubrücke bei Bes̆ka, Serbien. In: Beton- und Stahlbetonbau, v. 106, n. 11 (November 2011), pp. 778.
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20064452 - Published on:
03/01/2013 - Last updated on:
19/05/2020