News1 min ago
Engineering: Oresund Bridge
Earlier this week, however, when I crossed between Malmo, Sweden and Copenhagen, Denmark I found that this is exactly what the Scandinavians have done! At the Swedish end there's a bridge and at the Danish end there's a tunnel! (They're linked on a man-made island in mid-stream). I'm sure that there are sound engineering reasons for doing it this way but does anyone know what they are?
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There are several bridge/tunnels around the world. The basic reason is to stop shipping hitting the bridge. It is easier to give them a nice 1 mile wide channel with no obstructions, rather than a channel with bridge piers in it every couple of hundred yards. Here is a picture of the Chesapeake Bay Tunnel/Bridge. It is much cheaper to build a bridge with short spans, but of course you can't get an aircraft carrier under them!! http://www.budowle.pl/budowle/grafika/ameryka_polnocna/chesapeake_bay_bridge-tunnel_2.jpg
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