Ozimek Suspension Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Ozimek Suspension Bridge
Native Name:Most wiszący w Ozimku
Native Name Lang:pl
Carries:Pedestrians
Crosses:Mała Panew River
Locale:Ozimek, Poland
Designer:Karl Schottelius
Design:Suspension bridge
Material:Wrought iron and Steel
Spans:1
Load:3 tons
Builder:Malapane Steelworks
Begin:1825
Open:12 Sep 1827
Coordinates:50.6764°N 18.2122°W

The Ozimek Suspension Bridge (Polish: '''Most wiszący w Ozimku''') is a suspension bridge over the Mała Panew River in Ozimek, Poland. Designed by Karl Schottelius and completed in 1827, it is the second oldest wrought iron suspension bridge in Europe.

The bridge was manufactured in a local Malapane Steelworks in Ozimek which supplied bridges to European cities from Berlin to Petersburg. It was constructed between 1825 and 1827 from parts made of 57 tons of wrought iron and 14 tons of steel. Suspended between two towers, on each side of the bridge, are four chain cables which support the span. The deck was made of timber.

The bridge was used as a road bridge until 1938; then it continued to be used for pedestrian traffic only.

The first extensive renovations of the bridge were carried out between July 2009 and September 2010. During the renovations the entire bridge was taken apart, renewed and put back together again, and its structure strengthened with steel cables.[1]

Notes and References

  1. News: Most wiszący w Ozimku . miasteria.pl . 2010-05-17 . 24 February 2011. pl.