Paul Sauer Bridge Explained

Bridge Name:Paul Sauer Bridge
Carries:N2 national highway.
Crosses:Storms River
Locale:Eastern Cape, South Africa
Designer:Riccardo Morandi
Design:Arch bridge
Material:Concrete
Height:120m (390feet)
Mainspan:100m (300feet)
Begin:1953
Complete:1956
Cost:£100,000[1]
Coordinates:-33.9685°N 23.9315°W

The Paul Sauer Bridge, also known as the Storms River Bridge, is a deck arch bridge over the Storms River in the Eastern Cape of South Africa. The bridge is located on the Garden Route section of National Route 2, between Cape Town and Port Elizabeth. At a maximum height of 120m (390feet) above the Storms River, it was the highest concrete arch in Africa until the Bloukrans Bridge, 216m (709feet), opened on the same road in 1984.

It is named after Paul Sauer.

Structural design

The bridge was designed by Italian engineer Riccardo Morandi, and constructed by Concor between 1953 and 1956.

It spans 100m (300feet) and sits 120m (390feet) above the river. The main span of the bridge consists of a reinforced concrete arch structure spanning between two concrete abutments located on the western and eastern sides of the river. The deck of the bridge consists of three main spans, the center span between the two abutments and the two approach spans up to the joint above the abutments. The reinforced concrete deck is supported by the arch by means of 12 sets three reinforced concrete columns or struts.

Construction of the bridge

The main arch structure was constructed in a unique fashion: the complete arch was divided into four semi-arches which were built with climbing formwork in an essentially vertical position on opposite sides of the gorge. These were then rotated and lowered into position in pairs to meet at the centre, thus forming the completed arch structure.

Maintenance

The Paul Sauer Bridge was renovated in 1986.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The history of the Storms River Bridge . 3 August 2014 . dead. https://archive.today/20140806104501/http://stormsriverbridge.co.za/index.php/bridge-history/2-uncategorised . 6 August 2014 .