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Eintveit Bridge

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Carries
  
Nothing

Locale
  
Etne

Construction begin
  
1958

Total length
  
25 m

Construction end
  
1962

Crosses
  
Eintveitelva

Material
  
Concrete

Opened
  
Never

Location
  
Etne

Similar
  
Vikedal Church, Åkrafjorden, Langfossen, Folgefonna National Park

The Eintveit Bridge (Norwegian: Eintveitbrua) is an unused road bridge in Etne municipality in Hordaland county, Norway. Access roads were never built to it, and the bridge has stood secluded and without traffic since it was erected. The bridge of concrete is approximately 25 metres (82 ft) long and has two lanes. It goes over the river Eintveitelva between the now-abandoned small farms of Eintveit and Bjelland.

In 1956 the area was a part of Skånevik municipality (later merging with Etne municipality), and in that year the municipal council allocated money to build a bridge across the Eintveitelva with access roads, as part of a larger road project that would follow the coastline along the northern side of the Åkrafjorden. The bridge would have been so broad that buses could drive at speeds of up to 40 kilometres per hour (25 mph) on it. Construction of the bridge began in 1958 and the bridge was completed in 1962. The road along the fjord was never built, and the bridge was never used by anyone other than random hikers. Since the road was not built, all of the small farms along that area of the fjord eventually became abandoned. The bridge falls into the "bridge to nowhere" category.

References

Eintveit Bridge Wikipedia