10 March 2012

The Highest Bridge in the World - Millau Bridge (France)

 Millau Bridge- Highest Bridge in the World


The Millau bridge over the River Tarn in the Massif Central mountains is more than 300m (984ft) high - taller even than the Eiffel Tower. With its concrete and steel pillars soaring high above the morning fog in the Tarn Valley, the construction makes a spectacular sight.
Info

Official name              Le Viaduc de Millau
Crosses                        Valley of the River Tarn
Locale                          Millau-Creissels, France
Architect                     Michel Virlogeux
Design                         Cable-stayed bridge
Total length                2460 m
Width                          32.05 m
Height                         343 m (max pylon above ground)
Longest span              342 m
Number of spans       204 m, 6×342 m, 204 m
Clearance below        270 m (890 ft)
Construction begin   16 October, 2001
Construction cost      € 394,000,000
Opened                       16 December, 2004
Inaugurated               14 December 2001[1]
Coordinates               44°0446N 03°0120E





A complicated system of hydraulic rams was used to slide the vast bridge deck into place. It was provided by Enerpac Hydraulic Systems - the company which also "lifted" Golden Gate Bridge off its foundation for better cushioning against earthquakes. Here is a diagram of pushing the bridge's deck:


From both sides of the valley the metal sections of the bridge are assembled, lifted slightly and then in an elaborate manoeuvre pushed into place on each of the seven supporting pillars. The architect, Norman Foster, said the bridge was designed to have the "delicacy of a butterfly"

Statistics

    2,460 m (8,071 ft): total length of the roadway
    7: number of piers
    77 m (253 ft): height of Pier 7, the shortest
    343 m (1,125 ft): height of Pier 2, the tallest (245 m/804 ft at the roadway's level)
    87 m (285 ft): height of a mast
    154: number of shrouds
    270 m (886 ft): average height of the roadway
    4.20 m (13 ft 9 in): thickness of the roadway
    32.05 m (105 ft 2 in): width of the roadway
    85,000 m3 (111,000 cu yd): total volume of concrete used
    290,000 metric tons (320,000 short tons): total weight of the bridge
    10,000–25,000 vehicles: estimated daily traffic
    €6.00–7.50: typical automobile toll, as of December 2009
    20 km (12 mi): horizontal radius of curvature of the road deck


540 workers spent years working on just erecting the towers before they could begin assembling the roadway.




Often the bridge is over the clouds which hover in the valley below. Construction workers on the ground could not see what the people on top of the towers were doing beacuse of the great height and frequent cloud cover.


Darkness did not slow down the construction as workers labored at times around the clock to get the important roadway open.



Unfinished, the first sections stop at a few hundred feet out. Eventually the two sides met in the middle and were connected. Now that the bridge is complete a driver can save 100 kilometers and 4 hours of driving time by sailing over the valley below.



National Geographic Documentary

You can download the documentary by National Geographic on Mallau Bridge from the following links.


Note: If you like this movie, I strongly suggest you to buy it on DVD or some other media! Support the authors!    

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