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Elgeseter Bridge

Elgeseter Bridge

Elgeseter bru
Trondheim elgeseterbru 3.jpg
View of the bridge
Coordinates63°25′16″N 10°23′36″E / 63.4211°N 10.3933°E
CarriesFour lanes on E6
CrossesNidelva
LocaleTrondheim, Norway
Characteristics
Total length220 metres (720 ft)
Width23.4 metres (77 ft)
Height16.5 metres (54 ft)
Longest span22.5 metres (74 ft)
No. of spans8
Piers in water6
Clearance above15.1 metres (50 ft)
History
Construction start1949
Construction end1951
Location

Elgeseter Bridge (Norwegian: Elgeseter bru) is a bridge in the city and municipality of Trondheim in Trøndelag county, Norway. It is part of the European route E6 highway which passes over the Nidelva river and connects Prinsens street in the Midtbyen area of Trondheim with Elgeseter street in the Elgeseter area of Trondheim in the south. The Trondheim city council decided on 17 March 1949 that the bridge should be built. Elgeseter bridge was opened in 1951 after a construction period of 2 years.[1]

History

The main entryway into Trondheim for hundreds of years has been at Elgeseter; the first bridge here is mentioned in 1178. It was on this bridge that the battle between the birkebeiners and the baglers took place in 1199. Two years after the city was destroyed by fire in 1681, the Old Town Bridge (Norwegian: Gamle Bybro) was built. Until then the Elgeseter Bridge was the only connection across the Nidelva. The bridge has been reconstructed many times. In the 16th century it was for a period called "Gårdsbroen" and "Kanikke bro". After the Old Town Bridge was completed, the bridge to Elgeseter fell to decay, and collapsed.

Trondhjem–Støren Line train on Kongsgårds bro

In 1863 a wooden railway bridge was constructed at that location for the Trondhjem-Størenbanen railway line to Trondheim. This bridge was called "Kongsgårds bro". The railway bridge was converted into a roadway bridge in 1885, after the train station was relocated to Brattøra.[2]

Media gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Trondheim Havn. "Bruer i Trondheim" (in Norwegian). Archived from the original on 2012-03-14. Retrieved 2011-03-23.
  2. ^ Store norske leksikon. "Elgeseter bru" (in Norwegian). Retrieved 2011-03-23.


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