Neha Patil (Editor)

Solis Viaduct

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Carries
  
Locale
  
Maintained by
  
Opened
  
1902

Material
  
Owner
  
Rhaetian Railway

Crosses
  
Albula

Official name
  
Soliser Viadukt

Design
  
Total length
  
164 m

Body of water
  
Albula

Bridge type
  
Arch bridge, Viaduct

Solis Viaduct httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Similar
  
Rhaetian Railway, Landwasser Viaduct, Albula, Albula Railway, Wiesen Viaduct

Rhb train crossing the solis viaduct


The Solis Viaduct (German: Soliser Viadukt) is a single track eleven-arched limestone railway viaduct. It spans the Albula east of the hamlet of Solis, in the canton of Graubünden, Switzerland.

Contents

Designed by the engineer Hans Studer, it was built in 1902 by Munari, Cayre und Marasi for the Rhaetian Railway, which still owns and uses it today. One of the most important structures on the World Heritage-listed Albula Railway, it is 89 metres (292 ft) high, 164 metres (538 ft) long, and has a main span of 42 metres (138 ft).

Solis viaduct graubunden switzerland


Location

The Solis Viaduct forms part of the Albula Railway section between Thusis and Tiefencastel, and is at the 49.33 kilometres (30.65 mi) mark from Thusis. East of the viaduct is the Stausee Solis.

Description

The limestone-built viaduct was conceived by Hans Studer as the first stone arch bridge in Switzerland to be designed in accordance with the elasticity theory. That choice of design allowed the use of a parabolic arch, and thus a very slim form of construction. Building costs could thereby be limited to 125,000 Swiss francs at 1902 prices.

With its height of 89 metres (292 ft), the Solis Viaduct is the highest on the Rhaetian Railway. It consists of a main span of 42 metres (138 ft) flanked by 10 other spans ranging from 8 metres (26 ft) to 10 metres (33 ft).

Renovation

In 1997, the viaduct was renovated at great expense. The previous isolation between the gravel bed and walls was filled in by a new sealing system, incorporating liquid plastic film and shotcrete. In addition, the rails and ballast were renewed.

References

Solis Viaduct Wikipedia


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