Rio–Antirrio bridge

Rio–Antirrio Bridge
Γέφυρα Ρίου - Αντιρρίου

The bridge on a windy day
Carries 6 lanes of Ionia Odos, (2 lanes each way & 2 emergency lanes) & 1 pedestrian & bicycle lane, European route E65
Crosses Gulf of Corinth
Locale Greece Rio & Antirrio
Official name Charilaos Trikoupis Bridge
Owner Greek State
Maintained by Gefyra SA
Characteristics
Design Cable-stayed bridge by Berdj Mikaelian
Total length 2,880 meters (9,450 ft)
Width 27.2 meters (89 ft)
Longest span 560 meters (1,840 ft)
History
Opened 7 August 2004
Statistics
Daily traffic Expected: 11,000 vehicles/day
Toll Cars: 13.20 €
Motorcycles: 1.90 €
Coaches: 29.70–64.00 €
Trucks: 19.90–41.00 €

The Rio–Antirrio Bridge (Greek: Γέφυρα Ρίου-Αντιρρίου), officially the Charilaos Trikoupis Bridge after the statesman who first envisaged it, is one of the world's longest multi-span cable-stayed bridges and the longest of the fully suspended type. It crosses the Gulf of Corinth near Patras, linking the town of Rio on the Peloponnese peninsula to Antirrio on mainland Greece by road.

The bridge accommodates both pedestrian and motor vehicle traffic.

Name

Its official name is the Charilaos Trikoupis Bridge. Charilaos Trikoupis was a 19th century prime minister of Greece; he suggested the idea of building a bridge between Rio and Antirrio. The project was too expensive at the time, when Greece was trying to get a late start in the Industrial Revolution.

The Greek word gefyra (bridge) also refers to the Rio-Antirio bridge in informal everyday speech, originating from the domain name of the bridge's official internet site.

Location

The Rio–Antirrio Bridge crossing the 3 km Corinth Gulf strait.

The 2,880 m (9,449 ft) long bridge (approximately 1.8 miles) dramatically improves access to and from the Peloponnese, which could previously be reached only by ferry or via the isthmus of Corinth in the east. Its width is 28 m (92 ft) — it has two vehicle lanes per direction, an emergency lane and a pedestrian walkway. Its five-span four-pylon cable-stayed portion of length 2,252 m (7,388 ft) is the world's second longest cable-stayed deck; only the deck of the Millau Viaduct in southern France is longer at 2,460 m (8,071 ft). However, as the latter is also supported by bearings at the pylons apart from cable stays, the Rio–Antirrio Bridge deck might be considered the longest cable-stayed "suspended" deck.

This bridge is widely considered[1] to be an engineering masterpiece, owing to several solutions applied to span the difficult site. These difficulties include deep water, insecure materials for foundations, seismic activity, the probability of tsunamis, and the expansion of the Gulf of Corinth due to plate tectonics.

Construction

Pylon construction

The bridge was planned in the mid-1990s and was built by a French-Greek consortium led by the French group Vinci SA, and which includes the Greek companies Hellenic Technodomiki-TEV, J&P-Avax, Athena, Proodeftiki and Pantechniki. The consortium operates the bridge under concession under its ΓΕΦΥΡΑ or ΓαλλοΕλληνικός Φορέας Υπερθαλάσσιας ζεύξης Ρίου- Αντιρίου (GEFYRA, Greek for "bridge", French-Greek Carrier of Oversea Connection of Rio–Antirrio) subsidiary. The lead architect was Berdj Mikaelian. Site preparation and dredging began in July 1998, and construction of the massive supporting pylons in 2000. With these complete in 2003, work began on the traffic decks with the steel fabrication being carried out by Cleveland Bridge U.K. and supporting cables by Freyssinet. On 21 May 2004 the main construction was completed; only equipment (sidewalks, railings, etc.) and waterproofing remained to be installed.

The bridge was inaugurated on 7 August 2004, a week before the opening of the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens. Olympic torchbearers were the first to officially cross its length. One of them was Otto Rehhagel, the German football coach who won the Euro 2004 Championships for Greece. Another was Costas Laliotis, the former Minister of Public Works during whose term the project had begun.

The total cost of the bridge was about €630 million,[2] funded by Greek state funds, the consortium and loans by the European Investment Bank. It was finished ahead of its original schedule, which had foreseen completion between September and November 2004, and within budget. Other sources talk about €839 million.[3]

Engineering feats

Due to the peculiar conditions of the straits, several unique engineering problems needed to be considered. The water depth reaches 65 m, the seabed is mostly of loose sediment, the seismic activity and possibility of tectonic movement is significant, and the Gulf of Corinth is expanding at a rate of about 30 mm a year. For these reasons, special construction techniques were applied. The piers are not buried into the seabed, but rather rest on a bed of gravel which was meticulously leveled to an even surface (a difficult endeavor at this depth). During an earthquake, the piers should be allowed to move laterally on the seabed with the gravel bed absorbing the energy. The bridge parts are connected to the pylons using jacks and dampers to absorb movement; too rigid a connection would cause the bridge structure to fail in the event of an earthquake. It was also important that the bridge not have too much lateral leeway so as not to damage the piers. There is provision for the gradual expansion of the strait over the bridge's lifetime.

Elevation chart of the bridge.

The bridge received the 2006 Outstanding Structure Award from the International Association for Bridge and Structural Engineering. In 2011 the bridge was featured on TV in an episode of Richard Hammond's Engineering Connections. In 2015, construction of the bridge was chronicled in the first episode of the Science Channel series Impossible Engineering.

On 28 January 2005, six months after the opening of the bridge, one of the cable links of the bridge snapped from the top of the M1 pylon and came crashing down on the deck. Traffic was immediately halted. The first investigation claimed that a fire had broken out on the top of the M1 pylon, after a lightning strike in one of the cables. The cable was immediately restored and the bridge re-opened.

Monitoring system

A structural health monitoring system was installed during construction on the bridge.[4] Still operating, it provides a 24/7 surveillance of the structure. The system has more than 100 sensors, including:[5]

One specific element of the system is the ability to detect and specifically treat earthquake events.[6]

Photography

Photography by both professional and amateur photographers or cinematographers is allowed and encouraged by the bridge management without the need for a permit, with the bridge's management often organizing special events inviting professional and amateur photographers and cinematographers to photograph the bridge and the cars or the pedestrians using it.[7] It has become a very popular landmark for street photography in Greece, with the local street photographers often showing in their photos the car or motorbike drivers and the pedestrians crossing the bridge.

References

  1. "The Earthquake Proof Bridge". Richard Hammond's Engineering Connections. BBC. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  2. "Rion-Antirion Bridge". Structurae. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  3. "Project Profile Greece Rion Antirion Bridge" (PDF). Retrieved 28 July 2016.
  4. "Specific Engineering Designs Used in Bridge Construction"
  5. National Instrument article: Detailed information about the technologies used for the sensors and acquisition unit
  6. "Rio Antirrio SHM", 2ISFO Conference at University of Hawaii
  7. "ΓΑΛΑΝΟΛΕΥΚΗ ΓΕΦΥΡΑ: Απονομή μεταξύ θάλασσας & ουρανού". ΓΕΦΥΡΑ. Retrieved 28 July 2016.
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rio-Antirrio Bridge.

Coordinates: 38°19′17″N 21°46′22″E / 38.32139°N 21.77278°E / 38.32139; 21.77278

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/27/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.