Negrelli Viaduct

The Negrelli Viaduct (Czech: Negrelliho viadukt by Alois Negrelli, also known as the Karlín Viaduct,), Czech republic, is a railway bridge over the Štvanice island that connects the Masaryk Railway Station in Prague with Bubny. It is historically the first Prague railway bridge over the Vltava and currently it is the second oldest Prague bridge over this river and its thirteenth downstream bridge in the capital.[1]

Negrelli viaduct
Viaduct - left branch of the Vltava river
Coordinates50.0958°N 14.4411°E / 50.0958; 14.4411 (Negrelli viaduct)
CrossesVltava
LocalePrague 6,
Prague 7,
Prague 8,
Bubeneč,
Holešovice,
Karlín,
New Town,
Czech Republic
Official nameNegrelliho viadukt
Characteristics
Design87 pylons
Total length1,100 metres (3,600 ft)
History
Construction end1850
Statistics
Daily trafficrailway
Location
Negrelli viaduct - 19th century
Viaduct - Štvanice island
Viaduct - the right branch of the Vltava
Viaduct section where traces of steam locomotives, riding the now discontinued railway line to nádraží Praha-Těšnov, are visible
Viaduct - První pluk street

It is also the longest railway bridge and the third longest bridge in the Czech Republic.

The viaduct was declared a Czech cultural monument in 1964.[2]

History

Construction

The Karlín Viaduct was built as part of the Dresden branch of the Northern State Railways Olomouc-Prague-Dresden project, which was approved by the State Railways Directorate in 1842. The construction started in spring 1846, was completed in 1849 and the bridge was put into operation on 1 June 1850. The construction costs amounted to one and a half million Austro-Hungarian gulden.[3]

At that time the bridge had 87 stone arches, eight of which stood directly in the Vltava River. The railway line was double-tracked, in the second half of the 19th century a third shunting blind track has been laid[4].The current width is 110 meters. The width of the bridge deck between the stone railings is 7.6 m. The length is 1100 meters and until 1910 it was the Europe's longest bridge.

The construction was to be entrusted to Jan Perner, who already led the construction of the line between Olomouc and Prague, but he unexpectedly died and Alois Negrelli took over the bridgework.[4]

The viaduct was built over the then unregulated river. Granite, mined in the Schwarzenberg Quarry, which is now flooded with the Orlík Reservoir,[5] was ferried from Kamýk nad Vltavou and processed on site.

The entire viaduct had vaults made of block masonry, Czech granite and pillar cladding were made of sandstone with granite blocks on the corners. The core of the masonry is made of quarry stone, the pillars are based on wooden gratings[6]

Up to 3000 workers of different nationalities participated in the construction. For the first time steam lifting machines were used to a greater extent.

Worldwide, it was a quite unique building, since in many places at that time similar bridges were built from wood and not from granite.

Operation and maintenance

Later, houses were erected in close proximity to the bridge. With the growing industry, vacancies under its arches were filled with craft workshops and forwarding companies, mostly with built-in floors.

In 1871 the bridge was extended on the south side by the Karlín connecting viaduct to enable a direct connection between Bubny and Libeň.

At the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries extensive adjustments were made to the Vltava River, and three branches under the Negrelli Viaduct near the former Šaškovy mlýny (Šaškovy mills) north of Pobřežní Street were back-filled.

By the end of the 19th century, critics pointed out that the bridge was an obstacle to the development and permeability of the city.[1]

In 1952–1954, three bridge arches were demolished in the area of Křižíkova Street to improve the throughput of motor vehicles. The newly created gap was bridged over by beamed lintels made of pre-stressed concrete. In 1981 a similar intervention was carried out on the Holesovice side, above the Bubenske embankment.[1]

The viaduct survived the August 2002 flood in full operation.

Reconstruction 2017–2021[3]

A major bridge reconstruction which started in 2017 is scheduled to be finished in 2021. The budgeted cost is 1,443 billion CZK (out of which 990 million CZK is funded by the European Union).[7]

It addresses the unsatisfactory condition of the bridge structure, the railway superstructure, the signaling, communication and heavy-current equipment and the overhead lines. At the same time preserving an important cultural monument.

References

  1. Štrompf, Petr (2014-03-22). "Negrelliho viadukt se dočká opravy, je vnímán jako ohyzda" (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  2. "Vyhledání dokumentů". iispp.npu.cz. Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  3. "Negrelliho viadukt". Negrelliho viadukt (in Czech). Archived from the original on 2019-11-14. Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  4. www.fg.cz, 2019, FG Forrest, a s. "Negrelliho viadukt". Prague.eu (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  5. www.benes-michl.cz, Beneš & Michl. "Negrelliho viadukt je druhým nejstarším stojícím mostem v Praze". www.tvarchitect.com (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  6. "MČ Praha 8: Kulturní památky - Negrelliho viadukt". m.praha8.cz. Retrieved 2019-09-27.
  7. Sůra, Jan (2019-04-01). "Rekonstrukce Negrelliho viaduktu je za polovinou, část po opravě se musí zbourat" (in Czech). Retrieved 2019-09-27.

See also

  • Jan Fischer, Ondřej Fischer: Pražské mosty. Academia, Praha 1985, ISBN 80-86699-44-7, p. 29–34.
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