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The Feda Fjord Bridge is the longest of eight bridges on a stretch of road that was constructed in southern Norway in the early years of this century. The road, with a length of 18 kilometres, also features seven tunnels. The structure is a suspension bridge, a common bridge type in Norway. It crosses the Feda Fjord, one of the many glacially-formed fjords on Norway’s coast. It has a total length of 556 m and a main span of 335 m, and leads into tunnels at both sides of the fjord.
The steel structure weighs 1,400 tonnes, and 350 tonnes of cables were used in its construction.
The bridge was designed with deck discontinuities (movement gaps) at its two towers, for which expansion joints were required. Due to the bridge’s asymmetrical design, resulting from the challenging terrain with cliffs at both ends, the movement requirements of the joints are very different. TENSA-MODULAR expansion joints of type LR8 (with 8 individual movement gaps allowing 640 mm of longitudinal movement) were selected for one tower, and LR2 joints, allowing just 160 mm of movement, were selected for the other.
Products: | TENSA-MODULAR expansion joints with up to 8 gaps |
Installed: | 2006 |
Structure: | Suspension bridge |
Length: | 566m (main span 335m) |
Crosses: | Feda Fjord |
Engineer: | Rambøll |
Construction: | VKR/HSM |