Hølen Viaduct

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Coordinates59°32′20″N 10°44′24″E / 59.539°N 10.740°E / 59.539; 10.740
CrossesSåna
Hølen Viaduct

Hølen viadukt
Coordinates59°32′20″N 10°44′24″E / 59.539°N 10.740°E / 59.539; 10.740
CarriesØstfold Line
CrossesSåna
LocaleHølen, Vestby, Norway
Characteristics
MaterialIron
Total length130.6 m (428 ft)
Longest span9.4 m (31 ft)
No. of spans14
History
DesignerAxel Petersson
Opened2 January 1879 (1879-01-02)
Closed21 September 1996
Replaced byHølendalen Bridge
Location

The Hølen Viaduct (Norwegian: Hølen viadukt) is a disused iron railway viaduct situated at Hølen in Akershus county, Norway. The iron carried a single track of the Østfold Line over the river Såna and the valley where the village of Hølen is located. The viaduct was the first pendulum pillar bridge in the world, and was designed by the principle's inventor, Axel Jacob Petersson. It is 130.6 meters (428 ft) long.

The viaduct was built as part of the Østfold Line and opened on 2 January 1879. It was structurally strengthened through a pillar replacement program in 1914. From 1931 Hobøl Station was situated on its north end. A new section of Østfold Line opened on 21 September 1996, resulting in the viaduct and the old line being closed. Hølen Viaduct is still standing, but not in use.

The Hølen Viaduct is an iron pendulum pillar bridge which crosses Såna. It is 130.6 meters (428 ft) long and consists of fourteen spans supported by thirteen pillars. Two spans measure 8.9 meters (29 ft), while twelve measure 9.4 meters (31 ft).[1] The bridge carried the single-tracked Østfold Line's and was situated 46.90 kilometers (29.14 mi) from Oslo Central Station.[2] The entire viaduct was built on a curve with a curve radius of 470 meters (1,540 ft).[1]

History

References

Bibliography

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