Garabit Viaduct

The Garabit Viaduct (French: Viaduc de Garabit) is a railway arch bridge spanning the Truyère river, near Ruynes-en-Margeride, Cantal, France, in the mountainous Massif Central region.


Viaduc de Garabit
History
Construction start1882
Construction end1884
Location
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The Garabit Viaduct, 2007, Cantal, Auvergne, France-1.jpg

Garabit viaduct by night (1 of 3).jpg

The bridge was built between 1882 and 1884 by Gustave Eiffel, with structural engineering by Maurice Koechlin,[1] and was opened in 1885. It is 565 m (1,854 ft) in length and has a principal arch with a span of 165 m (541 ft).[2]

Viaduc de Garabit Panorama.jpg

In movies

In 1976, it was used to represent the fictional crumbling "Cassandra Crossing" bridge in the movie The Cassandra Crossing, which collapses.[3]

 
Here seen with a train.

References

  • Billington, David P. (1983). The Tower and the Bridge: The New Art of Structural Engineering. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-02393-9.
  • Harvie, David I. (2006). Eiffel: The Genius Who Reinvented Himself. Stroud, Gloucestershire: Sutton. ISBN 0-7509-3309-7.
  • Loyrette, Henri (1985). Gustave Eiffel. New York: Rizzoli. ISBN 0-8478-0631-6.

Other websites

Coordinates: 44°58′31″N 3°10′39″E / 44.97528°N 3.17750°E / 44.97528; 3.17750