Puneet Varma (Editor)

Deutz Suspension Bridge

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Opened
  
October 1948

Body of water
  
Rhine

Deutz Suspension Bridge

Address
  
Deutzer Brücke, 50679 Köln, Germany

Bridge type
  
Self-anchored suspension bridge, Box girder bridge, Suspension bridge

Similar
  
Rhine, Severinsbrücke, Hohenzollern Bridge, Mülheim Bridge - Cologne, Great St Martin Church

The Deutz Suspension Bridge (German: Deutzer Hängebrücke) was a self-anchored suspension bridge using eyebar chains, across the Rhine at Deutz in Cologne, Germany. It was built from 1913 to 1915. In 1935, it was named Hindenburg Bridge after Germany's second President deceased the previous year. It collapsed on 28 February 1945 during repair works and was replaced in 1948 by the world's first steel box girder bridge designed by Fritz Leonhardt and Gerd Lohmer. H. D. Robinson, who later worked with David B. Steinman on the Florianopolis Bridge, another eyebar chain bridge, consulted on the towers for the design of this Cologne bridge. It reportedly later served as inspiration for American bridge engineers and was specifically cited as a design influence on the Three Sisters bridges in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania as well as for the Kiyosu Bridge on the Sumida River in Tokyo.

Statistics

  • span lengths 92 m – 185 m – 92 m
  • deck width 18.7 m / 27.50 m
  • References

    Deutz Suspension Bridge Wikipedia