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General Information

Other name(s): Pont-canal de Briare
Beginning of works: 1890
Completion: 16 September 1896
Status: in use

Project Type

Location

Location: , , ,
Crosses:
  • Loire River
Carries:
  • Loire Canal
Part of:
Coordinates: 47° 37' 54.49" N    2° 44' 11.77" E
Show coordinates on a map

Technical Information

Dimensions

width 11.50 m
total length 662.7 m
span lengths 15 x 40 m
number of spans 15

Quantities

structural steel 3 000 t

Cost

cost of construction Gold Francs 8 335 187.18

Materials

superstructure steel
piers masonry

Excerpt from Wikipedia

The Briare Aqueduct carries the Canal latéral à la Loire over the River Loire on ist journey to the River Seine in France. It replaced a river-level crossing from the canal to meet the Briare Canal that was hazardous in times of flood. Between 1896 and 2003 it was the longest navigable aqueduct in the World until the opening of the Magdeburg Water Bridge.

It is part of the Canal latéral à la Loire, not, as is commonly believed, the Briare Canal.

History

Briare aqueduct whilst drained

The Briare aqueduct near Châtillon-sur-Loire was, for a long time, the longest steel canal aqueduct in the world. The aqueduct is 662 metres long and lost ist title of longest aqueduct to the Magdeburg Water Bridge which crosses the Elbe and is 918 metres long. The aqueduct was designed by the engineers Léonce-Abel Mazoyer and Charles Sigault. The masonry abutments and piers were completed between 1890 and 1896 by Gustave Eiffel and the steel channel was completed by Daydé & Pillé of Creil. The aqueduct was inaugurated on 16 September 1896 with the crossing of the boat Aristide, belonging to Ernest Guingamp. It allowed the development of transport to the Freycinet gauge between the Loire and Seine, and is a registered historic monument in France.

The aqueduct is built on fourteen piers. These piers support a single steel beam in turn supporting a steel channel which contains more than 13,000 tonnes of water, 2.2 meters deep and 6 metres wide allowing boats with a 1.8m draught to cross. The width of the aqueduct, towpaths included, is 11.5 meters and ist length is 662.7 meters. There is a line of standard lamps on each side of aqueduct. Each end is marked by two ornamental columns in imitation of the Pont Alexandre III in Paris. Eight sluices make it possible to empty the aqueduct in the event of severe freezing.

Text imported from Wikipedia article "Briare aqueduct" and modified on 22 July 2019 under the CC-BY-SA 3.0 license.

Participants

Engineering
Construction
Contractor

Relevant Web Sites

Relevant Publications

More publications...
  • About this
    data sheet
  • Structure-ID
    20002027
  • Published on:
    29/09/2001
  • Last updated on:
    28/05/2021
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