Road–rail bridges are bridges shared by road and rail lines. Road and rail may be segregated so that trains may operate at the same time as cars (e.g., the Sydney Harbour Bridge). The rail track can be above the roadway or vice versa with truss bridges. Road and rail may share the same carriageway so that road traffic must stop when the trains operate (like a level crossing), or operate together like a tram in a street (street running).
Road–rail bridges are sometimes called combined bridges.[1]
Afghanistan
edit- Afghanistan–Uzbekistan Friendship Bridge between Termez and Jeyretan.
Argentina
edit- Transandine Railway rail tunnel converted to road use for time being, albeit single lane.
- Zárate–Brazo Largo Bridge
- San Roque González de Santa Cruz Bridge, between Posadas, Argentina, and Encarnación, Paraguay.
Australia
editCurrent
edit- Sydney Harbour Bridge, Sydney, carried further two rail tracks as tram tracks from 1932 until 1958.
- Narrows Bridge, Perth, carries Mandurah railway line in central reservation[2]
- Mount Henry Bridge, Perth, carries Mandurah railway line in central reservation[2]
- Bridgewater Bridge, Hobart, carried Midland Highway and South railway line[3][4]
- Burdekin Bridge
- Bli Bli Bridge, carries David Low Way over Maroochy River, also carried Moreton Central Sugar Mill Cane Tramway until the mid-1990s[5]
- Dickabram Bridge
- Grafton Bridge, Grafton, carries road on top level with North Coast railway line below[6]
- Septimus, Queensland – Head-Menkens Road – Cane tram[7]
- Fremantle Railway Bridge, Fremantle proposed to be rebuilt as combined bridge after flood damage; 1926.[8]
- Bloomfield Coal Loop over New England Highway near Thornton[9]
- Leonardi Di Palma road-rail bridge, Miallo, Queensland – Cane tram[10] 610mm gauge
- John Luscombe Pioneer River bridge, sugar cane tramway 610mm gauge
Former
edit- Menindee – separated in the 1970s.
- Penrith – separated in 1907 by construction of separate railway bridge.
- Tocumwal – separated by construction of adjacent road-only bridge in 1987.[11]
- Murray Bridge[12] from the opening of the railway in 1886 until a separate rail bridge was opened in 1925.
- Paringa Bridge, from its opening in 1927[13][14] until the Barmera railway line closed in 1982.[15] The railway area was converted to a cycleway in 1986. Originally one lane of traffic and the railway shared the area within the truss spans, but a single-lane deck was later attached to either outer side of the trusses to separate road and rail traffic.
- Echuca–Moama, opened in 1879, road only since adjacent rail-only bridge opened in 1989.[16]
- Gonn Crossing, 1926, on the Stony Crossing railway line. Road only since the rail line closed in 1964.
- Robinvale, 1927, as part of the Robinvale railway line. Road only after construction of the line was abandoned in 1943. Replaced by a new road bridge in 2006.[17]
- Camden Rail bridge attached to the road bridge until line closure in 1963.
- North Richmond, Rail bridge attached to the road bridge on the Kurrajong railway line until line closure in 1952.
Bangladesh
editBotswana
editBrazil
editBulgaria
editCameroon
edit- Wouri River bridge, in Douala – almost unserviceable because of poor condition[21][22]
- Bonabéri–Douala over Wouri River estuary
Canada
edit- Alberta
- British Columbia
- Derwent Way Bridge, Delta–New Westminster
- Mission Railway Bridge, Mission–Abbotsford; Rail only since the opening of the road only Mission Bridge
- Nova Scotia
- Ontario
- Alexandra Bridge, Ottawa until the tracks were removed
- Prince Edward Viaduct, Toronto since 1966 when the subway was commissioned on the lower decks
- Whirlpool Rapids Bridge, Niagara Falls, Ontario, carries passenger rail on the upper level, commuter autos on the lower level between Ontario and New York
- Québec
- Victoria Bridge, Montreal
- Quebec Bridge, Québec City
- The new Champlain Bridge when the Réseau électrique métropolitain is installed
- Saskatchewan
- St. Louis Bridge – 1915 rail only; 1928 road–rail; 1983; road only.
- Canadian Northern Railway Bridge (Prince Albert) – 1909–1960 road–rail; 1960 rail only;
- also a swing bridge 1909–1939
- Crooked Bridge – 1930
- CPR Bridge (Saskatoon) rail 1908; rail and pedestrian 1909
China (mainland)
editCurrent
edit- Across Yangtze River
From upstream to esturay: Yibin Jinsha River Road–Rail Bridge, Lingang Yangtze River Bridge, Linyu Yangtze River Bridge, Second Luzhou Yangtze River Bridge, Dingshan Bridge, Yudong Yangtze River Bridge, Baijusi Yangtze River Bridge, Caiyuanba Bridge, Dongshuimen Yangtze River Bridge, Chaotianmen Bridge, Guojiatuo Yangtze River Bridge, Zhicheng Yangtze River Bridge, Jingzhou Yangtze River Road-Railway Bridge, Wuhan Yangtze River Bridge, Tianxingzhou Yangtze River Bridge, Huanggang Yangtze River Bridge, Jiujiang Yangtze River Bridge, Tongling Yangtze River Road-Railway Bridge, Third Wuhu Yangtze River Bridge, Wuhu Yangtze River Bridge, Nanjing Yangtze River Bridge, Wufengshan Yangtze River Bridge, Husutong Yangtze River Bridge
- Across other rivers than Yangtze River
- Binbei railway Songhua River road-railway bridge (6-lane highway and Harbin–Bei'an railway)
- Daxie Bridge
- Ganjiang Bridge (2-lane road and Beijing–Kowloon railway)
- Hengyang Xiang River Road-Railway Bridge (Guangdong Road, Daqing Road and Hunan–Guangxi railway)
- Huainan Huaihe Bridge
- Jingyuan Yellow River Road-Railway bridge (road and Honghui Railway)
- Pingtan Road-Railway Bridge (G3 and Fuping railway)
- Qiansimen Bridge (4-lane highway and CRT line 6)
- Qiantang River Bridge
Second Qiantang River Bridge(road and Hukun railway, temporary closed for renovation)- Sino-Korean Friendship Bridge
- Wanghe Bridge
- Xinglin Bridge (6-lane highway and Fuzhou–Xiamen railway)
- Zhaoqing Xi River Bridge (G324 and Guangzhou–Maoming railway)
- Zhengxin Yellow River Bridge (S227 and Jingguang HSR)
- Zhujiang Bridge (Zhongshan Road and Guangzhou–Maoming railway)
Former
edit- Binbei Bridge (was a part of G202 and Harbin–Bei'an railway, road part closed in 2006, railway part closed and replaced by another bridge in 2016)
- Songpu Bridge (railway part abandoned, and replaced by Jinshan railway Huangpu River Bridge, still used by G320)
Czech Republic
edit- Bechyně. In 1928 a bridge was constructed to carry the railway line and road from Tábor into Bechyně. Previously the line had stopped on the other side of a deep gorge from the town and access was by way of a steep road and narrow bridge. The rail line runs in the roadway for 100 m and traffic stopped by lights as for a grade crossing.[23]
Democratic Republic of the Congo
edit- Kongolo Bridge
- Brazzaville–Kinshasa Bridge – proposed [24]
- Matadi Bridge – railway yet to be used. Built 1983.[25] Angola would like to use this bridge to reach their exclave of Cabinda.
Denmark
edit- Great Belt Fixed Link, the Western Bridge.
- Little Belt Bridge
- Øresund Bridge
- Masnedsund Bridge
- Storstrøm Bridge – A replacement bridge is under constriction, also road-rail, will have the same name
- King Frederik IX Bridge
- King Christian X Bridge in Sønderborg, railway closed.
- Oddesund Bridge
- Hadsund Bridge, railway closed, bridge replaced.
Egypt
edit- Proposed road-rail tunnel under Suez Canal[26]
- Suez Canal road rail bridge at El Hammad[27]
Estonia
editFiji
edit- On Viti Levu the CSR Company was obliged to provide road-rail bridges when it built bridges for the Cane Trains to their sugar mills, e.g. the two largest bridges over the Ba and Sigatoka Rivers. Many are now rail-only as separate road bridges has been built.
- The Ba Bridge (550 ft; 170 m) has 19 spans, 17 standard spans (30 ft; 9.1 m) and a short span at each end, and has been rail-only for many years. The Sigatoka Bridge (810 ft; 250 m) has 27 spans. Both bridges are prone to hurricane damage due to extra flow of water; the Ba Bridge often disappears under water but is not always damaged (see Cane Trains).
- Sigatoka Bridge was washed away by storms, January 2009.[28]
- Labasa River - Sugar cane tramway; 610mm gauge; proposed. [29]
Finland
edit- Ounaskoski bridge
- Bridge in Keminmaa
France
edit- Cize-Bolozon viaduct on the Ligne du Haut-Bugey built 1882, destroyed by the maquis in 1945, rebuilt 1950
- Pont Morand, Lyon
- Pont de Recouvrance, Brest – road & tramway – includes lifting span[30]
- Beatus Rhenanus Bridge
- Viaduc de Salles at Giroussens, Tarn, on the Chemin de fer touristique du Tarn
Germany
edit- Fehmarn Sound bridge
- Lindaunis Bridge
- Kattwykbrücke - Hamburg, new railroad bridge being built next to existing bridge, opening December 2020
- Moselbrücke Bullay – double deck road and rail bridge[31]
- Oberbaumbrücke
- Peenebrücke Wolgast
- Rügendamm
- Elbbrücke Lauenburg
Wartime
editGhana
edit- Unknown location with YouTube movie[32]
Guatemala
editHong Kong
editCurrent
edit- Lantau Link
- Tsing Ma Bridge (longest bridge span for road and rail traffic in the world)[33]
- Ma Wan Viaduct
- Kap Shui Mun Bridge
- Hoi Wong Road across Tuen Mun River estuary[34][35]
- Kai Fuk Road Flyover/Kwun Tong line viaduct between Ngau Tau Kok and Kowloon Bay stations
- Kwun Tong Road over Tsui Ping Nullah
- Castle Peak Road—Hung Shui Kiu over Hung Shui Hang (Hung Shui Kiu River)
- Ma On Shan Road/Ma On Shan Rail (now part of Tuen Ma line) over Tai Shui Hang/Nui Po Tung Hang
- Tsing Kwai Highway, Tung Chung line and Airport Express (road and four tracks of rapid transit) - two stretches
- Yuen Long Main Road over Yuen Long Creek (Yuen Long Nullah)
Former
edit- Bowrington Bridge, part of Hennessy Road across Bowrington Canal
- Sha Tau Kok Railway and Sha Tau Kok Road - bridges over Ma Wat River, Tan Shan River and Kwan Tei River
- Pui To Road[36]
Hungary
editIndia
edit- Digha–Sonpur bridge, Bihar
- Godavari Bridge, Andhra Pradesh
- Naranarayan Setu, Assam
- Saraighat Bridge, Assam
- Koilwar Bridge, Bihar
- Rajendra Setu, Bihar
- Munger Ganga Bridge, Bihar
- Farakka Barrage, West Bengal
- Vivekananda Setu, West Bengal
- Strachey Bridge, Agra, Uttar Pradesh
- Old Naini Bridge, Allahabad
- Old Yamuna Bridge, Delhi
- Malaviya Bridge, Varanasi Over Ganga in U.P.
- Nashipur Rail Bridge
Indonesia
edit- Cirahong Bridge – opened in 1893[39]
Iraq
edit- River Tigris in Baghdad – 1950[40]
Italy
editCurrent
edit- Mezzanacorti bridge over the Po on the Milan–Genoa railway
- San Michele bridge over the Adda on the Seregno–Bergamo railway
- Sesto Calende bridge over the Ticino on the Domodossola–Milan railway
- Soleri viaduct in Cuneo
- Turbigo bridge over the Ticino on the Saronno–Novara railway
- Valenza bridge over the Po on the Pavia–Alessandria railway
- Ponte della Libertà in Venice
- Vigevano bridge over the Ticino on the Milan–Mortara railway
Former
edit- Adenige bridge on temporary Mont Cenis Railway[41]
- Magenta bridge over the Ticino on the Turin–Milan railway
- Revere bridge over the Po on the Verona–Bologna railway
- San Nicolò bridge over the Trebbia on the Alessandria–Piacenza railway
Japan
editCurrent
edit- Great Seto Bridge, JR Shikoku Honshi-bisan Line and Seto-Chuo Expressway
- Kansai International Airport Access Bridge (Sky Gate Bridge R), JR West, Nankai Railway and 6-lane expressway
- Kobe Sky Bridge , between Kobe Airport and Port Island, carrying the Port Liner
- Murayama Bridge, Nagano Electric Railway and National Route 406
- Rainbow Bridge, Yurikamome and Shuto Expressway Daiba Route (route 11)
- Rokko Bridge, Rokko Island Line and 4-lane road
- Shin Yodogawa Bridge, Osaka Metro Midosuji Line and National Route 423
- Shin-Kuzuryu Bridge, Hokuriku Shinkansen (railway under construction) and Fukui Prefectural Route 268[42]
- Tatsunokuchi Bridge, Sendai Subway Tozai Line and 2-lane road
- Tatsupi Bridge, Tama Toshi Monorail Line and Tokyo Prefectural Route 149
Former
edit- Azumba Bridge – Azumabashi Line closed in 1972
- Inuyama Bridge – separated in 2000.
- Umaya Bridge – Umayabashi Line closed in 1971
North Korea
editSouth Korea
editLaos
editMacau
editMexico
editMozambique
edit- The Dona Ana Bridge has carried rail and road traffic, but not at the same time.
Myanmar
edit- Mu River
- Ye River – 240m
- Thanlwin Bridge in Moulmein, which is 2400m long
New Zealand
editA 1930 report listed 33 bridges and estimated that the cost of bridge-keepers, extra maintenance for the decks, etc. amounted to £15,500 a year, as against £4,307 paid to NZR.[43]
Current
edit- Alexandra – Manuherikia River, Central Otago Line – single level, shared deck (rail closed)
- Okahukura – Stratford–Okahukura Line between Taumarunui and Ōhura – two level, road under rail 1933-2009 (rail disused)
- Taramakau River – Ross Branch – single level, shared deck
- Hindon, New Zealand – Taieri Gorge Railway – single level – converted from rail only
- Sutton, near Middlemarch, New Zealand – Taieri Gorge Railway – single level
- Napier – Palmerston North – Gisborne Line – single level, separate decks (road closed)
- Inangahua – Stillwater–Ngawakau Line – single level, separate decks
- Arahura, near Hokitika – Ross Branch – single level, separate decks (replaced single level, shared deck bridge)
- Seddon – Main North Line over Awatere River – two level, single lane road under rail (road closed in November 2007); see picture above of Coastal Pacific crossing the bridge in April 2007
Former
edit- Arahura River – between Greymouth and Hokitika – single level – replaced in 2009[44]
- Blackball combined over Grey River[45]
- Huntly 1915–1959 (now rail/footbridge only) over Waikato River[46]
- Ngākawau River separated in 1939[47]
- Pekatahi – between Edgecumbe and Taneatua – single level, shared deck – track removed in 2017[48]
- Rakaia – separated in 1939
- Taramakau River Bridge Greytown - dual use from opening in 1893 until separate road bridge opened alongside in 2018.
- Waitaki – separated around the late 1950s
- Whanganui River near Taumarunui - dual use until separate road bridge opened upstream in 1960s.
Temporary
edit- Wairoa River – due to road bridge washaway 2008[49]
Nigeria
editNorway
edit- Rødberg Bridge carried the now closed Numedal Line to its terminus in Rødberg and the highway continuing to Geilo over Upsetelva in the center of Rødberg. The rails are still in place, covered by tarmac. There has been no rail traffic on Numedalsbanen since 1988. The railway is in the road, so car traffic had to stop when trains were passing.
- Bruhaug Bridge, also on Numedal Line carried both the railway and local car traffic over the river Numedalslågen. The road surface is wood.
- Hølendalen Bridge, near Moss. Motorway and railway, parallel separate bridges.
- Nygård Bridge in Bergen carries both the Bergen Light Rail and a street. A parallel bridge carries European Route E39.
Pakistan
editRailway Track under Metro Bus Track on Gate of Rawalpindi City near Marirh Chowk Muree Road Rawalpindi
Paraguay
edit- See above for the cross-border bridge to Argentina
Philippines
edit- Guadalupe Bridge in the Makati-Mandaluyong border over the Pasig River. The rail bridge of Line 3 is above the road bridge carrying EDSA.
Portugal
edit- 25 de Abril Bridge
- Pocinho Bridge in Vila Nova de Foz Côa (closed)
- Ponte Eiffel
- Ponte de Jafafe in Sernada do Vouga single level bridge over Vouga River used by Linha do Vouga
- Ponte Luís I
- Ponte de Valença in Valença, Portugal over Minho (river) used by Ramal Internacional de Valença
Romania
editRussia
edit- Khabarovsk Bridge over the Amur River
- Komsomolsk-on-Amur Bridge over the Amur River
- Nizhny Novgorod over River Oka[51]
- Crimean Bridge over Kerch Strait
Serbia
edit- Ada Bridge (rail track under construction)
- Pančevo Bridge
- Road–Railway Bridge (same carriageway, temporary, demolished 2018/19)
- Žeželj Bridge
- Rača Bridge (same carriageway until 2010, when a dedicated road bridge was built next to it)
- Orlovat Bridge (same carriageway)
- Titel Bridge
Slovakia
edit- Prístavný most (Harbour Bridge) over Danube river from Bratislava center to Petržalka district
South Africa
edit- Buffalo River at East London harbour (double-deck bridge)
- Umkomaas, KZN south coast
- Port Shepstone, KZN south coast
- Caledon River at Maseru
- Fairy Knowe (Wilderness)
- Qamata
- Tugela (at one time, many years ago)[52]
Sri Lanka
edit- Manampitiya Bridge over the Mahaweli River – This narrow bridge is used only for rail since 2006.[53][54]
- Oddamavadi Bridge (Valaichchenai Bridge) across Valaichchenai lagoon in Eastern Province – Railway-only since April 2010[53][55]
Sweden
edit- Øresund Bridge – 8 km long two-level bridge. Road (four lane) on top, rail (two tracks) below.
- A few narrow same-track combined road-rail bridges:
- in Oxberg ( )
- in Sveg ( )
- north of Moskosel ( ).
- in Kristianstad (industry railway, road in the same track)
- in Norrköping (industry railway, road next to the rail)
- Traneberg Bridge – in Stockholm, combined road and subway/metro rail bridge.
- Skanstull Bridge – in Stockholm, combined road and subway/metro rail bridge.
- Lidingöbron – 1 km long parallel road and rail (two separate bridges). The road bridge was built 1971; before that the old bridge had road and double track railway in the same carriageway.
Switzerland
editThe Bernina railway shares a bridge over the River Poschiavino at Campocologno just north of the Swiss-Italian border.
Both railways operated by Aare Seeland Mobil go over three combined bridges each. Four of these bridges cross the Aare river, one crosses a highway.
Thailand
editCurrent
editFormer
edit- Chulachomklao Bridge
- Chulalongkorn Bridge
- Rama VI Bridge (separated in 2003)
Turkey
edit- Gülüşkür Bridge - Crosses the Keban Dam in eastern Turkey.
- Yavuz Sultan Selim Bridge - Crosses the Bosphorus Straight, north of Istanbul. The bridge opened in 2016 with space allocated for a double-track railway which is still under construction.
Uganda
editUkraine
editUnited Kingdom
editCurrent
edit- Ashton Swing Bridge Preston. Crosses Preston Dock lock. Road traffic and pedestrians controlled by barriers from the lock control room. Still used by The Ribble Steam Railway and tour trains visiting from the main line, still running in 2012 the bridge is used for delivery of bitumen by railway to the Preston Total Bitumen plant. On arrival from Total's oil refinery in Immingham, North Lincolnshire, the tankers are parked at the exchange sidings. The steam railway staff divide the trains and shunt the tankers into Total Bitumen's siding for the bitumen processing and distribution plant, later reforming the trains for their return journey to Immingham.
- Britannia Bridge Robert Stephenson's famous, formerly 'tubular' railway bridge across the Menai Strait in Wales. Rebuilt as a road and rail bridge after a major fire in 1970.
- High Level Bridge Newcastle upon Tyne.
- King George V Bridge, Keadby, North Lincolnshire. Carries the A18 and the Doncaster–Scunthorpe railway across the River Trent. Opened in 1916, Althorpe railway station is on the western bank of the Trent, very close to the bridge, which has not lifted for some years.
- Belfast cross-harbour bridge, opened 1994–1995. See The Motorway Archive
- Kingsferry road and rail bridge, Isle of Sheppey. Built in 1960, until 2006 this was the only road crossing to the island. The bridge opens 20 times each day.
- Porthmadog, Wales, on the Welsh Highland Railway, Shared by this narrow gauge line and the main road through the town.
- Pont Briwet, over River Dwyryd, near Penrhyndeudraeth, North Wales – single track rail of the Cambrian Coast Line, beside wide single-carriageway road; re-opened in summer 2015 after major repairs.
Former
edit- Craigavon Bridge, is a double decker bridge located in Derry, Northern Ireland and is still in operation as a road bridge, it served as a rail bridge from its opening until the 1950s,
- Connel Bridge, near Oban, Scotland, was shared until the railway closed in the 1960s. A cantilever bridge.
- Ashton Avenue Bridge, Bristol road rail swing bridge.
- Queen Alexandra Bridge, still in road (A1231) use across the River Wear between Deptford and Southwick in Sunderland, mineral railway abandoned in 1921 after 12 years' use.
- Newhaven Harbour, East Sussex, swing bridge standard gauge harbour branch shared with main coast road to Brighton, closed about 1962.
- Runcorn Railway Bridge – rail; pedestrian bridge alongside was open until 1965.
- Cross Keys Bridge, on the Norfolk /Lincolnshire border, both sides now in use for road traffic. Swing Bridge
United States
edit- Anton Anderson Memorial Tunnel - a road-rail tunnel
- I Street Bridge carries two tracks of Amtrak/Union Pacific Railroad and two lanes of State Route 16 between Sacramento and West Sacramento.
- San Francisco–Oakland Bay Bridge carried two tracks of Key System between San Francisco and Oakland from 1936 until 1963.
- Mare Island Causeway is a lift bridge that links Mare Island to Vallejo, California, carrying a railroad track and a street.[57]
- Pit River Bridge across Lake Shasta- 4 lanes of Interstate 5 and also Union Pacific Railroad
- Acosta Bridge – Carries two monorail tracks for the JTA Skyway and six lanes of State Road 13 in Jacksonville.
- Lake Street Bridge – rail on upper deck (CTA Green & Pink Line) road on lower deck, bascule bridge.
- McKinley Bridge – rail removed in 1978.
- Wells Street Bridge – rail on upper deck (CTA Brown & Purple Line Express), road on lower deck, bascule bridge.
- Fort Madison Toll Bridge – rail on lower deck, road on upper deck
- Government Bridge – rail on upper deck, road on lower deck, swing-span bridge
- Keokuk Rail Bridge – rail on lower deck, disused road on upper deck, swing-span bridge above Lock and Dam No. 19.
- Kentucky & Indiana Terminal Bridge – Truss bridge between Louisville, Kentucky and New Albany, Indiana over the Ohio River. Road portion closed in 1979 when roadway collapsed under an overweight truck.
- Almonaster Avenue Bridge – Bascule drawbridge in New Orleans, Louisiana
- Florida Avenue Bridge – Vertical lift drawbridge in New Orleans, Louisiana
- Huey P. Long Bridge – Truss bridge in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.
- Huey P. Long Bridge – Truss bridge in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
- St. Claude Avenue Bridge – former road and rail bridge, nowadays it serves automotive and pedestrian traffic. New Orleans
- Longfellow Bridge – Four lane road with the MBTA Red Line in the median of the bridge connecting Boston and Cambridge over the Charles River.
- Charlestown Bridge carried the elevated MBTA Orange Line from 1901 to 1975
- Portage Lake Lift Bridge connecting Hancock and Houghton. The world's heaviest and largest double deck vertical lift bridge. 4-lane road on upper deck, rail on lower deck (converted to trail). The lower deck was also paved so the bridge could be placed in an intermediate position to allow road traffic only.
- Camp Ripley Bridge
- Oliver Bridge connecting Duluth, Minnesota and Oliver, Wisconsin. Rail on upper deck, road on lower deck.
- Washington Avenue Bridge – in Minneapolis across the Mississippi River. Opened in 1965, rail (Green Line light rail) added in 2011.
- Second Hannibal Bridge in Kansas City, Missouri across the Missouri River. Opened in 1917, had a road deck until 1956, when another bridge was built, but the rail deck is presently in use. Evidence of the road deck is still plainly visible.
- ASB Bridge in Kansas City, Missouri, across the Missouri River. Opened in 1911, it carried vehicular traffic until 1987, when new span was built. Bridge is unique that lower part is a vertical lift drawbridge, while without interrupting traffic on the upper deck.
- Eads Bridge in St. Louis, Missouri across the Mississippi River. Opened in 1874. It carries the road traffic on the upper deck and the St. Louis MetroLink on the lower deck.
- Broadway Bridge – Road and the IRT Broadway–Seventh Avenue Line of the New York City Subway
- Brooklyn Bridge – A road bridge that also carried elevated rapid transit service until 1944
- Manhattan Bridge – Road and the B, D, N and Q trains of the New York City Subway
- Queensboro Bridge – A road bridge that also carried elevated rapid transit service until the early 1940s.
- Railroad St. Bridge – Rome, New York – Railroad St. and Mohawk, Adirondack and Northern Railroad share right-of-way on bridge.
- Roosevelt Avenue (Flushing River) Bridge - double deck bascule span with IRT Flushing Line elevated line on upper level and Roosevelt Avenue on lower level over Flushing River, completed 1928
- Williamsburg Bridge – Road and the BMT Nassau Street Line of the New York City Subway
- Whirlpool Rapids Bridge, Niagara Falls, New York, carries passenger rail on the upper level, commuter autos on the lower level between Ontario and New York
- Clay Wade Bailey Bridge/C&O Railroad Bridge – Cincinnati to Newport, Kentucky over the Ohio River. (Technically, these are two separate bridges, but they are spaced very closely adjacent to each other and built on common piers.)
- Steel Bridge – A through truss, double lift bridge across the Willamette River in Portland, Oregon Carrying pedestrian, rail, automobile, bus, and MAX Light Rail, making it one of the most multi-modal bridges in the world.
- Benjamin Franklin Bridge – Suspension bridge carrying I-676 and PATCO Speedline trains between Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Camden, New Jersey.
- Harahan Bridge (formerly) - Through truss bridge across the Mississippi River connecting Memphis, Tennessee to West Memphis, Arkansas. Built for two railroad tracks and two one-lane "wagonways" cantilevered outside the through truss. Vehicular traffic moved to Memphis & Arkansas Bridge in 1949; though the original decks on both "wagonways" were removed, one of them was rebuilt for pedestrian/bicycle use in 2016.
Uzbekistan
edit- Amu Darya Bridge is the first bridge between Khorezm and Karakalpakstan, opened March 2004. It only has one track with the rails embedded into tarmac, used for trains and cars, one direction at a time, and is 681 m long. It now doubles the pontoon bridge that was the only link between Khorezm and the rest of Uzbekistan.
- See above for the cross-border bridge to Afghanistan
Venezuela
editVietnam
editZambia
editZimbabwe
edit- Beitbridge until 1995.
- Victoria Falls Bridge
Temporary
editDuring wartime and other emergencies, rail tracks on bridges are sometimes paved to allow road traffic to proceed. Examples include the Ludendorff Bridge at Remagen bridge in Germany.
After a landslide on the Stromeferry road in Scotland in 2012, a 150m section of the parallel railway was paved with rubber tiles to allow road traffic to avoid a 250 km detour.[58]
Proposed
edit- Italy – Messina Bridge
- Republic of the Congo – Democratic Republic of the Congo – Brazzaville-Kinshasa Bridge[59][60]
- Yemen – Djibouti – Bridge of the Horns
- Botswana – Zambia – Kazungula bridge – 2010
- Sunda Strait – Indonesia[61]
- Venezuela – Nigale Bridge (Maracaibo Lake )[62]
- Qatar–Bahrain Friendship Bridge for road and rail will be connecting Bahrain and Qatar.
Under construction
editThe examples and perspective in this article may not represent a worldwide view of the subject. (April 2023) |
- Bangladesh – Padma bridge[63][64]
- China – Baijusi Yangtze River Bridge (8-lane highway and CRT line 18)
- China – Changtai Yangtze River Bridge (S30 and Taichang ICR)
- China – Guojiatuo Yangtze River Bridge (8-lane road and CRT line 8)
- China – Humen Road-Railway Bridge (road and Shenzhan HSR)
- China – Libu Yangtze River Road-Railway Bridge (G55 and Jingyue ICR)
- China – Lingang Yangtze River Bridge (road and Chuannan ICR)
- China – Linyu Yangtze River Bridge (road and Line 1 of Luzhou Rail Transit)
- China – Ma'anshan Yangtze River Road-Railway Bridge (6-lane highway and Chaoma ICR)
- China – Taichang Yangtze River Bridge (Ruchang Expressway and Taichang ICR)
- China – Tongling Yangtze River road-railway Bridge of G3 (G3, Hewen HSR and Tongling Rail Transit)
- Taiwan - Danjiang Bridge (light rail cross)
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "ROAD AND RAILWAY BRIDGE". The Mercury. Hobart, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 16 June 1937. p. 6. Retrieved 1 July 2011.
- ^ a b Perth's New MetroRail Project Transit Australia April 2004 pages 120-123
- ^ Motive Power April 2009 page 117
- ^ Retaining Bridgewater Bridge for Rail Tasmanian Times 3 September 2020
- ^ Moreton Central Sugar Mill, Nambour Continental Railway Journal issue 126 July 2001 page 214
- ^ Grafton Bridge Roundhouse July 1982 pages 4-23
- ^ Light Railways issue 199
- ^ "Fremantle Bridge". The Examiner. Launceston, Tas.: National Library of Australia. 9 September 1926. p. 4 Edition: DAILY. Retrieved 1 July 2011.
- ^ [Rail Graphics North Atlas p72]
- ^ Light Railways issue 295 610mm gauge
- ^ Tocumwal Bridge Tender Announced Railway Digest September 1985 page 267
- ^ "05 Feb 1919 - RAILWAY AFFAIRS. - Trove". Advertiser. 5 February 1919.
- ^ "The Paringa Bridge". The Advertiser. Adelaide: National Library of Australia. 28 January 1927. p. 14. Retrieved 6 March 2012.
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