Kocher Viaduct Explained

Bridge Name:Kocher Viaduct
Native Name:Kochertalbrücke
Native Name Lang:de
Carries:Autobahn 6
Crosses:Kocher valley
Length:1128m (3,701feet)
Width:31m (102feet)
Height:178m (584feet)
Below:185m (607feet)
Begin:1976
Complete:1979
Coordinates:49.1775°N 9.7858°W

On the Kocher Viaduct (German: Kochertalbrücke) near Schwäbisch Hall in Germany the Autobahn 6 crosses the Kocher valley between Heilbronn and Nuremberg. With its maximum height of 185m above the valley bottom, it is the highest viaduct in Germany, and was also the bridge with the tallest pillars in the world before the Millau Viaduct, France was completed in 2004.

The nine spans of this prestressed concrete girder bridge cover a length of 1128m, the individual span lengths being 81m for the outer two and 138m for the remaining seven. Pillar height varies from 40m to 178m. The bridge table is 31m wide. Construction was from 1976 to 1979.

A museum in the village of Geislingen am Kocher below the bridge (visits by prior appointment) not only tells the bridge's story but also displays dinosaur fossils found during the construction of the motorway.

See also

References