Brusio spiral viaduct explained

Bridge Name:Brusio spiral viaduct
Native Name:Viadotto elicoidale di Brusio
Native Name Lang:it
Official Name:Italian: Viadotto elicoidale di Brusio|italic=no
Other Name:[1]
Carries:Rhaetian Railway
Locale:Brusio, Switzerland
Owner:Rhaetian Railway
Maint:Rhaetian Railway
Design:Spiral arch bridge, viaduct
Material:Stone
Length:110m (360feet)
Spans:9, each of 10m (30feet)
Open:1 July 1908
Coordinates:46.2539°N 10.1278°W

The Brusio spiral viaduct (or Brusio circular viaduct; Italian: Viadotto elicoidale di Brusio, German: Kreisviadukt Brusio) is a single-track nine-arched stone spiral railway viaduct on the Bernina Railway. It was opened on 1 July 1908.

A key structure of the World Heritage Site-listed Bernina Railway, it is located near Brusio, in the Canton of Graubünden, Switzerland, and was built to limit the railway's gradient at that location within its specified maximum of 7%. It is considered to be one of the architectural highlights of the Rhaetian Railway.[2] [3]

Location

The Brusio spiral viaduct forms part of the Bernina Railway section between Brusio and Campascio railway stations. It is just south of Brusio, and approximately from St. Moritz railway station.[4]

History

During the construction of the Bernina Railway, its engineers decided that its route and features ought to follow and adapt to the natural landscape to the maximum extent, avoiding unnecessary complexity wherever possible.[5] They also decided to avoid the construction of a rack-and-pinion railway due to a desire for the line to be suitable for both passenger and freight traffic; the adoption of a rack system would have made it impossible to run heavy trains, effectively preventing the line's use by freight trains. It was also desirable for the line to serve valley locations, and thus for the route to vary in height above the valley floor. It was such decisions that drove the construction of the Brusio spiral viaduct.[5]

A spiral viaduct was required immediately south of Brusio to limit the railway's grade to the required maximum of 7%, so that the train would not slip on the way up, or be uncontrollable on the way down.[6] The construction of a viaduct on this site had not been originally planned for; instead, a spiral tunnel was at one point intended to be constructed; however, local geological factors discouraged the boring of such a tunnel. Therefore, the line's engineers decided to construct a 360 degree curve with a 50mto70mm (160feetto230feetm) radius, rising up from the valley floor, the viaduct forms a part of that curve.

The spiral viaduct is long, has a horizontal radius of curvature of, a longitudinal slope of 7 percent, and is made up of nine spans, each in length. The spiral configuration maximises the rate of elevation in comparison to a conventional curve, while also avoiding the inconveniences of a switchback alternative.[7] Wherever reasonable, local materials were sourced for its construction.[5]

On 1 July 1908, the viaduct was opened in conjunction with the opening of the TiranoPoschiavo section of the Bernina Railway. In 1943, the whole of the Bernina Railway was taken over by the Rhaetian Railway; this company continues to both own and operate services across the spiral viaduct to the present day. The services the spiral viaduct carries facilitate not only local trade purposes but tourism as well. Since 2008, the spiral viaduct, along with the rest of the route, has been recognised as a UNESCO World Heritage Site.[5] [8]

See also

References

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Shales 1996, p. 219.
  2. Web site: The Swiss train tourists don't take . . Adam H. . Graham . 19 June 2014.
  3. Carter, Garratt, Jackson, Johnston, Middleton and Zimmermann 2003, p. 95.
  4. Web site: Panorama Brusio Circular Viaduct, Graubünden, Switzerland . carto.net . 17 April 2020.
  5. Web site: Jacopo . 6 September 2017 . The Bernina Railway . https://web.archive.org/web/20200307220058/http://heritagetimes.eu/bernina-railway/ . 7 March 2020 . heritagetimes.eu.
  6. Web site: Our ultimate guide to the Bernina Express train line . newlyswissed.com . Jordan . Girardin . 11 March 2019.
  7. Wolmar 2019, p. 204.
  8. Web site: Bernina Express: Why You Should See the Swiss Alps by Train . miramonticorteno.com . 26 June 2019.